iv.cf. four Good Record Cy Miller's two mound vi. lories in Hit 1 District Ivisclml' play-offs af, Brooklyn brought hi 1949 record to 9 wins and l.w defeats. The long, lean Miller burg righthander won four an, lost one as a sophomore in 1948 WATCH TROUBLE? Prompt Repairs Reasonable Rates B. J. GIRTON COLLEGE SPORTSWEAR 103 E. Beaver IS THE HEAT getting you down? PICK UP BY Stopping at our Air Conditioned Fountain. * Drinks * Sandwiches * Ice Cream ALWAYS COOL OFF AT McLanahan's S. ALLEN STREET IT'S COOL IT'S COMFORTABLE Good Food At Its Best Air Conditioned Restaurant THE SUMMER COM,EC. I AN. ST VTK COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Eastern Champs CHUCK DRAZENOVICH Penn Stale's three Eastern champions of the winter sports' season are pictured above. Drazeno vich nabbed a revenge win from Syracuse's Marty Crandall to cop the Intercollegiate Boxing Asso ciation heavyweight crown for the second year. Meade successfully defended his tumbling title for the second time in the Eastern gymnastic run-offs, while Barr, who placed fourth nationally, won top honors in the unlimited class in the wrestling tourney at Ithaca, N. Y. Main Session Tourneys Begin Action Monday Tournaments in golf, softball and tennis are scheduled to start Monday, according to C. M. “Dutch” Sykes, Main Session director of recreation. Entries for the golf and tennis tournaments will be held open un til Friday, while softball registration closed yesterday afternoon.. The ticket booth at the entrance to New Beaver Field will be open for the remainder of the wei may sign up for the links tourney at the Caddy House, across the highway from the first lee. There is no charge for either the softball or tennis tournaments, but a one dollar entry fee, in addi tion to the ten dollar greens’ fee, is being charged for participants in the golf tourney. Included in the twenty-team en try list for the Main Session soft ball league are Alpha Chi Sigma, Beaver House, Delta Chi, Delta ■k for tennis entries, while golfers Upsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa, Phi Kappa Sigma, Pi Kap pa Alpha, Sigma Pi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Triangle and Zeta Beta Tau. Intellectuals, Newman Club, Nitlany Co-op, Old Men, Red Val ley, Windjammers, Winners and Yahoo’s are also listed for play in the league. Games will be played twice a week, with the opening games slated for New Beaver Field Mon day evening. Both Right-Handers Cy Miller, of Millersburg, Pa., and A 1 Tkac, of McKeesjort, Pa., were the pitching aces of the Penn State baseball team. New Lion Record Horace Ashenfelter’s 9:03.6 in the NCAA championships repre sents the fastest two-mile in Penn Equipment Students living in the Pol lock Circle and Niilany Dorm area are reminded that the athletic equipment room in Dorm 34 will be open from 5:30 to 8:30 p. m. each week day. Students may draw equip ment during these hours by presenting matriculation cards. VISIT... Campus Restaurant Corner Pugh & E. College Ave. HOMER BARR Sports Teams Name Leaders For 1949-50 Captains have been elected for 1949-50 for all varsity sports with the exception of basketball and fencing. The football, lacrosse and tennis teams have named co-cap tains to guide their respective squads. Baseball Richard Wertz Boxing .... Charles Drazenovich Cross-Country ... Robert Parsons Football Robert Hicks Negley Norton Golf • • ■ Thomas Smith Gymnastics .. Michael Kurowski Lacrosse Edward Belfield Robert Louis Rifle Gerald Prange Skiing . William Graf Soccer Rilph Hosterman Swimming John McGrory Tennis William Aiken Owen Langdon Track James Gehrdes Wrestling James Maurey Rec Slate Continues With Outdoor Show “Stagecoach,” starring John Wayne and Claire Trevor has been selected as the first movie to be shown in the out-door amphi-theatre, located at the Pugh St. entrance to the campus. The movie will be shown to morrow at 9 p. m., and is the first in a series of five Holly wood films that will be played during Main Session. In case of rain, the film can be seen in Schwab auditorium. Admission is free. Friday from 9 to 12 p. m., Gene Booth's orchestra will be featur ed in a dance at the Temporary Union Building. Admission to this event is 50 cents. The first “Fun Night” is on tap for Saturday from 8 to 11 p. m., in Recreation Hall. Cards, dancing, volleyball, shuffleboard, badminton and ping pong are ni cluded on the entertainment list. This event is also admission-free. Monday, the third group sing is slated for Schwab Auditorium, while the second event in the Summer Artists Course is set for Tuesday evening in Schwab. Earn $2O A Day Lighting FREE Cigarettes 103 YOUNG MEN AND WOM EN earned $67,000 in TWO MONTHS demonstrating sen sational new invention that holds 23 cigarettes and AUTO MATICALLY HANDS THEM TO YOU LIGHTED AND READY-TO-SMOKE WHILE YOU DRIVEI Avoids auto acci dents. Fits all can. Clamps easily to steering poet. Over 700,000 quickly sold. PAT ENTED. NO COMPETITION. Sells at $6.96. You make huge profits. FREE SAMPLE. FREE CIGARETTES to help you demonstrate. GUARANTEED SALES—no risk- FaM time or spare tim*. No experience or car noeded. Kurryl Thousands of car owners waliteg in your territory* Write for Guaran teed Money-Making ping. Dept. C. PMES-A-LXTE, 79 Madison Avo„ WEDNESDAY, JULY 6. 1919 Sidelights ... MAKE U. S. TEAM Horace Ashenfelter and Curt Stone, who with Gerry Karver gave Penn State one of the na tion’s top distance threesomes, have been named to the United States track team which will tour Europe this summer. Ashenfelter, last of the three to graduate, qualified for his degree earlier • his month. OLDEST SPORT Baseball is the oldest sport on the Penn State agenda. The dia mond sport, coached for the last 19 years by Joe Bedenk, got its start in 1875, while the first of ficial football game was not play ed until 1887. STEEL WORKER Line-busting Franny Rogel, the Lions’ dynamic fullback, won't let up during the summer. Rogel, who considers a day lost if he doesn’t work out at least an hour, has landed a job in the steel mills near his North Braddock home. FOUR NEWCOMERS Four newcomers are on the schedule of the 1949 football team. Villanova, Boston College and Nebraska will be played on New Beaver Field, while Army's Black Knights will play host to the Nittanies at West Point. CO-CAPTAINS Co-Captains will be in com mand of three sports at Penn State in 1949-50. Football’s co leaders are Negley Norton, of Altoona, and Bob Hicks, of Lan caster, while the captains-elect of lacrosse are Ed Belfield, of Swarthmore, and Bob Louis, of Philadelphia. Tennis was the third team to choose co-captains, naming Bill Aiken, of Pittsburgh, and Owen Landon, Jr., of Wil liamsport. 300 HITTERS BACK Four of Penn State’s six .300 hitters will be back for the 1950 baseball season. The returnees and their 1949 batting averages are Clarence Buss, Milton, .357; Jack Kurty, Ludlow, Mass., .311; Dick Wertz, Newport, .310; and Bill Bair, Williamsport, .300. Buss and Kurtz are catchers, Wertz is first baseman and captain elect, and Bair is a pitcher. OLD RIVALS The University of Pittsburgh and U. S. Military Academy are the oldest opponents on the 1949 Penn State football schedule. But whereas Penn State and Pitt have clashed 48 times since 1893, the Lions and Cadets have collided only three times since 1899. Penn State won its first game against Army, and the two games since ended in stalemates. ON ROGEL Penn State’s hard hitting full back, Francis Rogel, of North Braddock, apparently is headed for a modern Lion record in ground-gaining. In 1947, the Cot ton Bowl game included, Rogel chewed off 649 yards in ten starts, and last year his yardage mount ed to 602 in nine games. As a freshman and varsity fullback, he has participated in only one losing game during his last three seasons. WELL-TRAINED Elmer Gross, Who’S make his debut as Penn State basketball coach in 1950, gained his major experience as player and coach under his predecessor, John Law ther. The 32-year-old Gross, who soon will qualify for his doctorate degree from the University of Pittsburgh, played on Lawther’s top teams in the 1940-1942 period, and joined his mentor again as a coaching aide in 1945. Gross won the Purple Heart during amphib ious landings in France in 1944, Skate far HeaMi Every Tue.-Wed.Fri. ovonhtg and Sunday afternoon and evening. CALL 6384 or 3994 For Party Reservations Mile Weet on BeMefonle Road—et the Bwipnai OrKmWN HfUg Milt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers