SATimtDAY, MAY 7, lMfl Penn State Golfers Open EIGA's Win 6-1 Smith, Yerkes Shoot Par As Lions Trounce Pitt ’ With Tom Smith and Jim Yerkes blazing out oar 6!Ps on the Penn State links yesterday afternoon, the Nittany golf team loomed as the favorite to annex the Eastern Intercollegiate Golf Associa tion Begiomfl‘ title for the second consecutive year. Play will continue this morning with the Penn Staters meeting Cornell and Army meeting Pitt. This afternoon the final match will fee played in the round robin Competition with Penn State vs. Army and Cornell vs. Pitt. I In yesterday afternoon’s com petition, Army slid by Cornell, 4-3, while Penn State crushed Pitt, «-l. ; Tom Smith, leading off for the home team in its defense of the EIGA title, outclassed his Pitts burgh rival, Bill Buerress, at the onset. The Nittany golfer was Holding a four under par going into the 15th hole and when he won his match, six dovyn and five holes to go, held a three under par mark. In spite of some tough breaks on the last three holes, the vet eran turned in a par 69 for win number one on the Blue and White scorecard. Shooting in the number six spot, Jim Yerkes carved out his best record of the competitive season with a par 69 to defeat Anderson of Pittsburgh by ten strokes. Yerkes’ and Smith’s marks will stand as a record on the Penn State course, since this match marked the first time since par was established two weeks ago that two men have shot 69’s. 71.5 AVERAGE Ray Artz’s 71, George Maza nowski’s 72 and Marv Golden berg’s 73 gave the team a 71.5 average, an excellent record for a par 69 course. The team’s only loss was a 2-and-l loss suffered by Joe Durniak, who toured the 18 holes in 75 strokes. Summary: PENN STATE «. PITT 1 Smith (PS) defeated Buerrese, 6*5. Boyle (PS) defeated Simon, 2-1. Mihocka (Pitt) defeated Durniak, 2-1. JUzanowski (PS) defeated Sekow, 6*6. Arts (PS) defeated Mohr, 3-2. Yerkes (PS) defeated Anderson, 7-d. Golden berg (PS) defeated Caufield, 7*6. ARMY 4. CORNELL 3 Rose (Army) defeated Smith, 1 up on 19th. Moran (Army) defeated Thomas, 3-2, Peek (Cornell) defeated Brandon, 2-1. Hlestand (Army) defeated Jerome, 2 up, Huber (Cornell) defeated Gard, 2-1. Bates (Army) defeated Robinson, 2 up. Stibolt (Cornell) defeated Szymesyk, 3-4. Major League Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Thursday Night Washington 5, St. Louis 3 TmMi,’i RssrlU Chicago 6, New York 2 . Philadelphia 5. Detroit 4 Washington at St. Louis (N) Standings W L Pet. W L Pet. N. Y. 13 4 .765 Phila. 9 9 .500 Cleveland 8 4 .667 Boston 6 8 .429 Detroit 9 6.600 Waah'ton 6 11 .363 CMsnho 9 8.529 St. Louis 3 13 .188 NATIONAL LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results New York 3. St. Louis 0 Cincinnati at Boston fN) Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (M) Chicago at Brooklyn (N) Standings W L Pet. W L Pet. Boston 10 6 .626 St. Louis 7 8 .467 N. Y. 10 7.588 Cincinnati 7 8 .467 Brooklyn 9 7.563 Chicago 6 8 .429 Phils. 3 9 .471 Pittsburgh 6 10.876 Don't Forget Your Alma Mater Keep In Touch With Campus Activities And The Success of the Nittany Lions! SUBSCRIBE TODAY $2.00 SEMESTER $ 4.00 YEAR Name _ ~The ***** DAILY COLLEGIAN Enclosed: p. $2.00 Sem ( ) $4.00 Year () Slato CoU * ,e ' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Lions Cop 7th Victory, Defeat Dickinson, 14-0 Special to The Daily Collegian Although held to five hits by two Dickinson pitchers, Penn State’s once-beaten baseball team took advantage of some erratic hurling and trounced the Red Devils by a 14-0 score on Biddle Field in Carlisle yesterday. Loose fielding by the home The Dickinson nine committed seven bobbles. BAIR WINS 2ND Righthander Bill Bair won his second straight 4-hitter for the' Lions as Coach Joe Bedenk’s charges ran up their fifth con secutive win and seventh in eight •starts. Bair, pitching for the first time since he took Swarthmore into camp by 10-1 April 14, struck out five and walked but a single batter. He was never in trouble. The Lions tallied a run in the first inning on four walks by los ing pitcher Jim Abbott, who gave up 10 passes and wild pitched four times. Second baseman Gene .Solomon scored his first of four runs on a fielder’s choice. Jack Kurty, Nittany catcher, led off with a triple in the second inning and scored a moment later on Abbott’s wild pitch. FOUR MORE RUNS Third sacker Bill Tegtmeyer slammed a double in the fifth to lead the Lions to four more runs. Abbott walked four more Nit tanies and wild pitched twice in this frame. Three more Blue and White runs crossed the plate in the sixth as the Red Devil in field fell to pieces and was charg ed with four errors. Singles by Captain Hal Hack man and Bair, and Kurty’s sec ond triple were the • big blows in a five-run uprising by the Bedenkmen in the seventh. Penn State (14) R H O A E 2 0 4 0 0 Albright. If Solomon, 2b 0 14 3 0 Hackman, as 2 0 0 0 0 Laganosky, rf 1 0 5 0 1 Wertz, lb Ondick, cf Tegtmeyer, 3b Kurty, c Totals Dickinson (0) Combs, cf Durgin, ss „ Abbott, p, lb Chew, rf Miller, 3b Copeland, lb Crist, If Fellona, c Wilbert, c Goldblatt, 2b Doll, 2b Muray, If Pejokovich, p 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 0 4 27 14 7 Penn State 1 1004350 o—l 4 Dickinson 00000000 o—o Two base hit*-Durum, Tegtmeyer. Three base hits—Kurty 2. Double plays—Durgin, Doll and Copeland. Bases on balls off — Abbott 10, Pejokovich 2, Bair 1. Struck out by —Bair 5, Abbott 4. Hit by pitcher— Abbott (Ondick), Bair (Chew). Wild pitch es—Abbott 4. Losing pitcher—Abbott. 2 p.m.—Golf— E.I.G.A. 2 p.m.—Lacrosse— Syracuse State College 2 p.m.—Tennis— Duquesne . . Stale College 2 p.m.—Volleyball— YMCA Tourney. . State Coll. 3:30 p.m.—Lacrosse— Oberlin Stale College 3:30 p.m.—Baseball— Navy 3:30 p.m.—Track— Colgate Hamilton. N. Y team also led to their downfall. Roth Tosses IM One-Hitter Giving up only one hit and striking out 18 batters, Gerry Roth, Phi Sigma Kappa, came up with the best mound job of the young intramural softball season Thursday night, as his mates bat tered Beta Sigma Rho, 11-2. Roth was in trouble only in the sixth frame when the losers ganged up for two tallies, but by that time the game was on ice. The Phi Sigs socked Earl Shaf fer of the losers for six runs in the second inning, and added one in the fourth and another quartet in the fifth. Punching across one tally in the last of the seventh inning, the independent Ramblers squeaked through with their second straight victory of the season, this time over the Nittany Co-op, 5-4. The win moved the Ramblers into the semi-finals of the independent tourney, where they will meet the high-flying American Society of (Cbntinued on vage four) 4 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 12 10 2 6 10 110 5 27 *6 1 HO A E 0 10 0 12 4 2 0 6 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 1 13 0 0 12 0 0 0 4 10 0 2 11 13 3 2 0 2 10 0 0 0 0 Today's Sports Stale College Annapolis Ramblers Win Lacrosse Heads Gird For Weekend Sports Sport fang at the College will be treated to another big Spring sports weekend todav with the Lion golfers, lacrossemen, and tennis team battling opponents on the home grounds. Seven YMCA volleyball teams play in Rec Hall this afternoon. Coach Nick Thiel and his band of Penn State lacrossemen, hope ful of changing fortunes after sus taining three straight losses, will oppose an outstanding Syracuse Chick Werner, Lion track coach, sends thinclads against Colgate today at Hamilton, N.Y. C- v r »r ' nr>.">THrps ATHAI'V PAGE THREE team at 2 p.m. on New Beavet field. The Lion jayvee lacrosse match with Oberlin at 3:30 p.m. has been cancelled. I n order to spring a surprise upset win over the Syracuse Salt, ine Warriors, the Lions will have to tie-up one of the highest scor ing midfields in the business. Buoying one of the strongest lacrosse teams in Orange history is the All-American trio of Bill Fuller, George Cody and Bill Archbold. Combined with Captain Bob Severance, Jim DeNicola and Jack Britton, on the attack spots, the Syracuse offense is clicking off goals at the alarming rate erf 17 per contest. STUDY RADIO ...this summer! Many interesting, lucrative, Jobe now open—demand trained personnel! The National Academy of Broad casting offers an intensive two-montha rammer course in professional radio writing and speaking. Write for com plete information, now! NATIONAL ACADEMY of BROADCASTING SSSS 16th tt., N. W. Washington 10, D. C.
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