PAGE SIX Nolan Shines Thielmen Down Hobart, 9.3 For Lions' Third Victory The Blue and White lacrosse team spoiled Hobart College's 50th anniversary opener yesterday afternoon on New Beaver Field by trouncing the Statesmen, 9-3. It was the Lions' third straight win. Jarrin' John Nolan led the Nittany attack with 5 goals, while "Bugs" Baer sent 3 between the posts, and Roeco lannetta tallied one. The Thielmen grabbed the lead at the 5 1 / 2 -minute mark in the first period, whe n Baer sent a shot past Jack Frenaye, Hobart goaltender. Four minutes later, Nolan flashed one into the net. At the end of the first quarter, State led, 2-0. Baer tallied his second point afte r a minute and a half of the lecond period had gone by on a long shot from about twenty-five yards out. Shortly afterwards, Nolan dropped a shot in from di rectly in front of the goal. HOBART SCORES The Lion defense held the Statesmen scoreless until one minute before the half was over. when Gordon Satterley scored on a melee in front of the Blue and White goal. Captain Bill Hollen bach blocked Satterley' s first bid for a score, but the ball bounded free, and Satterley shoved it through. The Lions came roaring back at the start of the second half. Jahire John Finley missed a shot from in front of the net, but No lan scored his third point'imme liately afterwards from the right of the goal. Mike Cecere, Orange and Pur ole defenseman, scored Hobart's second point by running the length of the field and firing the ball past Hollenbach. Nolan tallied Lwo straight points in th e Bourth quarter to make the score read, 7-2, in favor of the Lions. The first was a jump -shot faros► in front of the goal aiiter he had received a pass from Art Lorenz. Nolan scored the second on a beautiful pivot shot. Volleyball Sigma Nu-A extended its bid for .11K voller: all chamuionshio one step further Tuesday night when it downed Phi Sigma Ravoa-A 15-9 and 16-14 in the quarter-finals. Karma Sigma lost the first game of its series with Sigma .Pni Sigma-A 16-9. and then came back with a strong finish to win the next two encounters 15-10 and 16-7. Sigma Cni-A and Phi Gamma Delta-B split the first two otunes. Sigline Chi taking the first 15-5. and the Phi Gams winning the second 15-9. In the third tilt the lead changed hands several times '..ofore Sigma Chi was able to eke out a 1644 victory and win the match. DU went under 15-7 in it, lirst tiff with Beta Theta Pi-A. but surged forward to take the .ratch, winning the last two games 15-3 and 15-12. Down the Alley Although Lambda Chi Alpha lost to Delta Chi at the Dux Club it still retained the IFC lead by a wide margin. Kappa Delta Rho stepped into the runner-up spot by defeating Tau Kappa Epsilon. High stand ing Depta Upsilon and Alpha Chi Sigma both lost, to Alpha Gamma Rho and Chi Phi, respec tively. George Kowatch, Delta Upsilon, took the honors for the best single game tally of 211. TEAM STANDINGS Lambda Chi Alpha 48 24 .666 Kappa Delta Rho 43 29 .59? Delta Upsilon 42 30 .583 Alpha Chi Sigma 49 32 .556 Chi Phi 40 32 .556 Delta Phi 40 32 .556 Delta Tau Delta 35 37 .196 Tau Kapp* EPsileu 32 40 .444 Beta Mots Pi 32 40 .144 Alpha Gamma Rho 32 40 .444 Alpha Sigma Phi 26 46 .361 Theta Chi 22 50 .306 By Ed Watson Beer, on an assist from Lorenz, dumped his final point in Prom the left, side, but Hobart's Bob Weymouth retaliated with the Sta•temen's last goal. Rocco lan etta zipped the ball past the Ho bart goalie at the 11-minute mark for the Thielmen' s final point. Hollenbach played a brilliant defensive game for the Nittanies, as did the Orange and Purple's Frenaye. However, it was State's all-around speed both on offense and defense that was the deriding factor. "Morph" Sziadziewicz and Torn Smith also shone on the defense for the undefeated Lions, while Baer did an excellent job of set ting up the Blue and White of fense. The State stickmen will seek their fourth straight victory on Saturday afternoon, when they meet Cornell at New Beaver Field. Starting time is 2 o'clock. Cornell's Big Red will be after their first victory of the cam paign. Last Saturday, the Ithac ans were soundly trounced by RPI. The score of the game was 12-1. The Thielmen defeated the Big Red lacrossers in last year's tilt. PENN STATE (9) HOBART (3) Hollenbach G Frenaye Smith P Hartney • Szacitiewiez CP Hill Kissel D Williamson Finley D Cecere Baer C Nolan Nolan A Holban Bel field A McCabe Thomas I If Sutterley Lorenz OH W SMITH Substitutions: PENN STATE. Louis, Locotos, McCleary, Lux, Janette. Hager man, Whitaker. Hayes, Worley, Aber r.athy, Nt.hoda c HOBART, Kelly, Kataja, Hoover, Kraus, Couch, Vandervert, Vassar, and Baer. Intramural Sports With three intramural cham pionships in its grasp. Sigma Nu is pointing .for a fourth in the badminton tournament. Both Sigma Nu entries. Ed Sulk and Jim Worley. are undefeated. Sulk winning his flight over John Hogan, DU, 15-14, 14-15. 15-3, and orlev taking his division over Ray Brodie. Phi Epsilon Pi, 13-15, 15-3. 15-4. Jerome Markowitz. Phi Steam Delta. captured flight one lionors by outlasting Bill ArnulJ. Phi Kappa Sigma, 15-8. 15-10: Dick Hoover. Theta Xi. smothered Jim Salina, Delta Tau Delta. 15-5, 15-4 for flight two honors, and Charles Sowash. Lambda Chi Alpha• went three games to too Charles CY niters. Pi KA. 15-6. 12-15. 15-14 !or the flight three title. Don Holtzman, Beta S:gma Rho, took flight four by outooint- Me. Jim Hartsock, Sigma Alp' - ia Epsilon, 15-2. 15-9: Dan Pearson, DU rallied to too Clarence Herr. Pi KA, 9-15. 15-6, b 5-13, for flight Harold Howard. Chi Phi. won ./y identical 21-12. 21-12 count . over Micke7 Silverman. Sigma Chi in flight seven and Sulk cap tured flight eight honors. Speidel Slates Clinic A clinic to explain wresding lundannentals an d holds to anyone interested is Planned for Rec Hall from 4 to 5 p.m. every Wednesday. Thursday. and Friday. said Charlie Speidel, v. , r est I i ITEr coach. All . men interested in a weight lifting club are urged to attend P meeting in the Rec reation Office in Rec Rea at 7:30 tonight. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA CORNELL Badminton Weight Lifters Intramural Entries Fraternity and independent groups who haven't turned in their team lids for the Spring intramural program must sub mit their entries to the intra mural office in Rec Hall by 5 o'clock today. Six sports, softball, soccer, golf, golf putting, horseshoes doubles, and tennis doubles are listed on the intramural pro gram. Trackmen Depart For Penn Relays Eighteen track and field men will leave State College tonight to represent th e Nittany Lions at the two-day University of Pennsylvania Relay Carnival at Franklin Field. Favorites in the four-mile relay and the distance medley relay, the Wernermen will open their part of the field competition at 3 p.m. Friday in the discus throw. , Dave Pincus, third place winner of last year's meet, heads the "plate" spinners, with Bar clay Moyer and Dan Pearson fill ing out the three man squad. In the shotput event, Keith Shearer will join Moyer and Pear son in throwing the 16-pound ball. Shearer, a newcomer on the squad's roster, has improved greatly since the first practice and will push Moyer, Middle At lantic AAU champ, for the num ber one spot. QUARTER MILE Track competition will start with a quarter-mile relay. Jim Robinson will take the first stretch, Don Harris will run the turn, Rea Carroll will take the third 110-yards and George "Red" Thomas will run in the anchor spot. With Jerry Karver running the mile in the distance medley relay, the College runners are listed among the top teams in that race. Paul Koch will run the quarter, Mitch Williams the half and Bill Shuman, the three-quarter dis tance. Horace Ashenfelter is listed to run in the twilight two mile race. (Continued on page seven) Handball Intramural singles handball champs are adding new stars to their crowns as they move toward the dnals of the doubles comne flion. In the independent round-robin, Llayoff, Ed Taggert coupled with Milt Simon. clinched the tourney Lv losing the first game 13-21 and then coming back and winning 21-12, 2 , 1-13 over Ross Manley and Al Purchase. Fraternity champ, Joe Cclone, Sigma Nu, moved into the finals with his partner, Ed Sulk, as they also dropped the first game to Bob Williams and Bob Giles. Beta Joe Colone and Ed Sulk cap tured another championship for Sigma Nu last night when they on the handball doubles title by deetating Er win Tenser and Ira Kristel Phi Sigma Delta, 21-14, Colone also is the fraternity singles champion while Sulks is Eight champion in the enrrent badiminton tourney. Theta Pi. 14-21 and then came back to win 21-14. 21-10. In other e.ames. John Higgs and I-taloh Gift, Sigma Phi Sigma, tooned Luther and Hagerman, Pn' Delta Theta. 21-20, 21-20. while Ira Kristel and Jay Tenzer. Phi Sigma Delta. were trauncing Finley a nd Wausat. Sigma Pi. 21-4. 21-5. In the playoff match, Kristel and Tenze: were forced to the limit to tor, Riggs and Gift, 21-13, 21-P3. Colone and Sulk, Sigma Nu, reached the semi-finals by .iwamp ing Kline and Murray. SAE, 211-5, 21-6, and Williams and Giles slipped by Carlson and Ryder, Delta Chi. 21-18. 21-19, befor;.. lositg. to tne Sigma Nu duet. DVARSITY Mogazi n For Young Mon • woo C 111,1 ii=l Between the Lions A "condensed program," measuring 43% inches by 5 inches and printed on both'sides, arrived in Wednesday's mail heralding one of the largest and longest track meets in the nation, the Penn Relays. Eighty-one events are listed on the more than a meter long agenda. Included will be ten special events, eight American cham pionships, six high school championships, one prep school relay, two junior high school runs, a parochial school race, a high school conference championship and an elementary school race. What does all this data mean to Penn State and its track team? It means that out of the 481 competing schools listing over 3,000 athletes, the Nittany Lions are slated to emerge victorious in at least two categories. Defending the four-mile relay title won last year at the relays, the Lions are heavily favored to repeat their earlier conquest. Only Curt Stone is missing from the team of Jerry Karver, Horace Ashenfelter, Bill Shuman and Stone, 1947 champs. Another distance run, the distance medley relay, is scheduled to succumb to the Lion with Mitch Williams, Karver, Shuman and Ike Evans or Ashenfelter donning the spikes for the two and one half-mile stint. While the Nittany runners are favored to win these events, the other schools are far from sitting back and letting Penn State steal the show. Up New York way George Eastman's Manhattan team , poses a speedy half-mile relay team in Bill Kent, John Gorman, John Quigley and Joe Cianciabella, and their city brothers, NYU, are priming to defend their mile and sprint medley relay titles won last year. PINNED ON PEARMAN NYU Coach Emil Von Elling, pinning his hopes on Reggie send Pearman, plus John Nelson, Hugo Maiocco and Jim Gilhooley into the mile relay and the same lineup into the sprint relay. Irving Mondsche in the broad and high jump completes the Violets' good bet" roster, and Columbia's Bill Vessie in the high jump rounds out the New York candidates for relay fame. Swinging to the service teams, an aggregation of football "names" holds sway for the Cadets and Midshipthen. All American guard Joe Steffy is listed for the shotput for Army, while E. Newbold Smith and Dick Scott are slated for Navy in the discus throw. Two other Army aces, John Hammack and George Sylves ter, are signed up for the 440 relay and shuttle hurdle race. Record- breaking Charles Fonville, Michigan shotputter, will take the spotlight Friday afternoon at the Franklin Field MITCH WILLIAMS carnival. Just last Saturday Fonville smashed the world record of 57 feet 1 inch set in 1934 by Jack Torrence of Louisiana by tossing the 16-pound shot 58 feet %' inch. On Feb. 21 the Michigan Marvel topped the world indoor record by flinging the ball 56 feet 10% inches at the Michigan State Relays. The giant blue and gold star will try for a new record Friday to insure his almost certain berth with the Olympic team. Fourteen other trackmen from Michigan will be out to take other trophies in six other events. Everyone, including the host team, the University of Penn sylvania, will get into the act either Friday or Saturday in the 14-hour melee. Penn's team, headed by 400-meter champ Jeff Kirk, will enter the sprint and distance medleys, the 440, 880, one mire relay, two-mile, four mile, freshman mile relay and the 480 shuttle hurdle race. _ On the international scene, the University of Western On tario's mile relay team will compete for the championship of America. Four Canadian intercollegiate champs, who lowered the mile relay record in Canada, are listed to go to the starting line against some of the best American relay teams in the country. Fortysix men from Cornell will try to capture the meet trophies for force of numbers. Teams in all major relay events from the 440 sprint relay to the 4-mile distance relay are listed in Coach John Moakley's roster. From the University of New Hampshire to Mac Dill Field, Florida, and from San Antonio, Texas, to Princeton, New Jersey, athletes from 12 to 35 will gather at Franklin Field, Philadelphia this weekend to compete in the gala-star-studded Penn Relays. TMI9I3AY, APRIL 2i2, 1046 • I.: . . 1 . :ip • ••• W RECORD, DAUGHERtY, A NEW RECORDr By Elliot Krone FOUR•MILE RELAY PENN'S ROSTER 46 FROM CORNELL
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