SATURDAY, MAY 20, IMO Track Cave-1n Causes Tri-Meet Switch to Pitt A cave-in on the Beaver Field cinder tra ck yesterday has caused the transfer of what was advertised as Penn State's last home track meet of the season to Pittsburgh. The heavy rain of the past few days re suited in the accumulation of water in a cess * I pool beneath the track. The re sult was a 15-foot cave-in for a few feet along the east side of the track. When it was decided that the track might not be in proper condition by this afternoon. the triangular meet between the Lions, Pittsburgh and West Vir ginia was transferred to Pitt Sta dium. The Lion thinclads will be favored to even out their 1950 dual and triangular meet record, having previously bowed to' Michigan State and Ohio State in a three-way battle and to the Spartans in a two-cornered meet, while thumping, Navy in their Beaver Field debut last 'week. Seniors Bow Out Six seniors, including Captain Jim Gehrdes and ace sprinter Wil Lancaster will be strutting their stuff for the last time in triangular meet competition. Others who • will bow out are javelin tosser Wil Bertrum, shot putters Chuck Drazenovich and Doug Shearer, and discus throw er Max Schlienger. Although this is the last tri angular meet foi the Statemen, they will compete in the IC4-A meet in New York next week. Several members of the squad will probably he entered in the NCAA meet in June also. The Lions enter the meet favored to cop top honors, but stiff competition is expected from both the Mountaineers and the Panthers. Pitt dumped -Notre Dame by one-third of a point in a dual meet earlier this season. Seeks New Mark Attention will be centered on Vic Fritts, Ted Roderer, Lancas ter and Gehrdes. Fritts will be out to break the Penn State mark in the high jump, while Roderer will be seeking to better his javelin toss of 206 feet 8 inches against Navy. Gehrdes, almost a sure winner in both hurdles tests, and Lan caster, who, will probably out class his 220-yard opponents, are expeted to 'turn in a nip and tuck battle in the century. Last week Gehrdes flashed home in 9.5 seconds ,to upset Lancaster. The time would have set a' new Penn State mark were it not for a six-mile tailwind Penn State track Captain Jim Gehrdei will lead the Nittany cindermen against Pitts burgh and West Virginia in Pitts burgh this after noon. Gehrdes will be seeking victory in th e two hurdles events and the 100 yard dash. Lacrossemen Close Here With Hobart Penn. State's lacrossemen will conclude their home season this afternoon by entertaining .Hobart College on the golf course field. The game is scheduled for 2:30. Coach - Nick Thiel will present a revamped lineup in an attempt to end the home season on a sweet note. Thiel has switched Bud Wol fram to a midfield position and inserted Ned Herring to the at tack. Hobart comes to the Nittany Valley sporting a five wins against three losses record, com pared to State's one win, five loss tally. Coach. "Babe" Krause's squad strong attack built around their junior sensation, Bob De mouth, who as a sophomore last year scpred 35 goals. Thiel would not go out on. the pray erbial limb and predict - a Lion victory but he implied as much when he said, "All the teams we have played can beat Hobart except Western Maryland." Lacrosse fans will remember that the Lions trounced Western Maryland earlier in the season, 17-4. The starting lineup for State will consist of Co-captain Eddie Bellield, Jim Reed and Herring at the attack; Co-Captain Bob Louis, Jack Wilcox and Wolfram at midfield; John Hagerman, Joe Drazenovich, and Vance Scout at defense and Phil Benedetti tend ing the goal. Golf-Putting Action Reaches 3rd Rotind The intramural golf-putting tournament will move into the third round Monday when play resumes on the caddy-house green. Bob Kolarik, Lambda Chi Al pha, will see action Monday against Bob Helfand, Phi Sig ma Delta.' Dick Kowal, Sigma Phi Sigma, will meet George Rippel, 'Acacia, and Bob House worth, Triangle, will compete with Bob Richardson,' Phi Kap pa Sigma. • Other third round contestants will be: Frank McKean, Phi Gamma Delta vs. Dick Goodling, ATO, and Newton Comly, AGR, vs. Jack Roy, Phi Sigma Kap pa. 4 :, Sr ' r --- i. O .... ~......• Opportunity in Business There are *clever enough Gibbs trained secretaries to meet the persistent demand. arras GAN CIIIIIIC DrinWi efiltaog (Katharine Gibbs Ma Pork Am. NEW YORE 11 .33 Plymouth St,, MONTCLAIR PI E. swat st. ctitC/19 , iss Aiwa St, PROVIDENCE§ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA ----. Softball Teams Advance- Four teams moved, into the semi-finals of the independent intramural softball tournament Wednesday. The Champions knocked off Nittany Co-op, 8-5, and . A.S.C.E. cracked out a 17-5 win over Sim mons Hall. The Brown Baggers swamped Ath. Hall, 12-2, while the Ramblers took the measure of Penn Haven, 3-1. In the semi-finals the Champ ions will tangle with 4 1 / 2 ..5.C.E. and the Brown Baggers will meet the Ramblers. 1M Tennis Continues Yeatman-Fink, Sigma Phi 'Al pha, and, Erb-Crouthamel, Phi Kappa Psi, won second round in tramural tennis victories this week. Gainsburg-Wolfson, Zeta. Beta Tau, and Erb-Crouthamel, Phi Kappa Psi, also won third round matches. GRADUATES 1 Use Our Nationwide . Job Placement Service We specialize in the placement of college trained men and women who are seeking a permanent sales, accounting, engineering, ad ministrative, professional or tech nical position. We represent over 3,000 national employers. WRITE FOR APPLICATION COLLEGE DEPARTMENT NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT RESEARCH INSTITUTE 116 S. MICHIGAN AVE., Dept. 399 CHICAGO , ILL. Nine Blanks Pitt, Takes 11th Victory PITTSBURGH (Special to the Daily Collegian)—Pounding out eight hits behind the four-hit pitching of Merle Gunnett, Penn State's baseball team blanked the University of Pittsburgh nine, 6-0. It was the squad's 11th win against 5 losses. Lions and Panthers will 'cross bats again this afternoon. Either Al Tkac or Bill Bair will be on the hill for Coach Joe Bedenk's crew. Gunnett, a right-handed jun ior, notched his second win -of the season against no losseS 'while allowing only four hits, all of them singles. He struck out ten, walked five, and never was in trouble. • The Lions opened up on 'Pitts burgh's hurler Larry Brent in the first, Dick Wertz driving in Bill Ondick from second With a single. In the second, with Gun nett on first via a fielder's choice, Joe Tocci blasted a two-out home run down the left-center field alley to put State in front, 3-0. That was the first of .Joe's three hits and his first four master of the season. Wertz chipped in with his sec ond hit in the fifth and scored on Jack Kurty's double. The final two runs were added in the sev enth when Carmen Troisi, filling in for the injured Chris Ton nery at shortstop, drove in Owen Dougherty and Kurty with a booming triple over the left fielder's head. Dougherty and Kurty had ieadhed base on walks, two of the ten given up by Brent, and Russell. who relieved him in the eighth after being lifted for a pinch-hitter. The box score: Penn State Ab R H Tocci, 2b 5 1 3 Little, 3i) 3 1 0 Ondick, *lf • 3 0 . 0 Hopper, cf 3 0 0 Wertz, lb 4 1 2 Kurty, c 4 1 1 DoSirh'ti, rf . 4 1 1 Trois!, as 4 0 1 Gennett, p 3 1 0 (,Pittsburgh Ab R H W. Lewis, 2b 3 0 0 Devey. 2 b 1 0 0 R. Lewis, If 3 0 0 Padlako'c, as 3 0 0 Lowe, of 4 0 1 Marheska, lb 3 0 ,0 Murphy, rf 4 0 1 Ross, 8b 4 0 0 Matich, 'c 4 0 2 Brent, p 0 0 0 Butero 1 0 0 Russel, p 1 0 0 Totals 31 0 4 Totals 38 6 8 Now Playing 'Stampede' with Rod Cameron Johnny Mack Brown Sunday - Monday 'Champion' with Kirk Douglas and Marilyn Maxwell * STARLITE DRIVE-IN THEATRE Lion Golfers Face Red Raiders Today The Lion golfers will come up against a rugged foe this afternoon when they meet Colgate on the Red Raider's links at 2 p.m. Sporting wins over Colgate in the last two year's meet ings, the Nittanymen will carry a record of six wins and three losses into today's match. Coach Bob Rutherford's boys will find their two chief nemises in the Raider's tricky nine-hole course and Bob McCall, Colgate ace, who reached the National quarter-finals before being eli minated. Coach Rutherford announced that he will start Captain Toni Smith in the number one spot, followed by Ted Robertson, Joe Durniak, Jim Yerkes, Ray Artz, Alex Munro, and Bob Kunkle, with Pete Kalandiak as alternate. Colgate has one of the top teams in the East, and Coach Rutherford expects a tough match. He believes that his boys are "at their peak now," and expresses confidence that they will prove no pushovers. The Lion linksmen will close the season next Friday when they tangle with the Bisons of Buck nell. Netmen End Foreign Card Penn State's unpredictable tennismen will match strokes with Pittsburgh, at Pitt, this afternoon in the duel which will conclude their 1950 foreign swing. The Nittany racqueteers will finish the season with home matches against Bucknell and Colgate next week. State enters the match with a record of five wins against three losses. A win today will assure them of at least a .500 season. The Pitt game is annually one of the highlights on Coach Sherm Fogg's schedlile. Last year his netmen defeated the Panthers, 6-3. The doubles combination of hicki Wieland and Jim Howells figure prominently in State's chances of victory. If these two can perform as well today as in previous outings the racket wielders should be assured of their third straight winning sea son. The 7-2 upset of Duquesne last Wednesday also raised the team's hopes of a sweep of their final three games. ROOM & BOARD Science Sessions June 'l3 to September 2 ALPHA. ZETA Campus Call John McCool 7621 ear ;-4 - Shaves you better • Costs you less PROVE ;IT YOURSELF AT OUR EXPENSE Make this test. you risk a penny. Buy a package of PALS. PAL—tiollovi Ground like.) h. psoot eta Use as many Then if you don't ogre° they're a barber's your best blade buy.• . more shaves, better shves, at lowest razor c ost.• • return the dispenser to us for refund of full purchase lif Your dealer can't supplanted send us his name ides w and enclose pay- —ground like a rackknife PAGE THREE Penn State's new baseball aide, Charles (Chuck) Medler, also is head trainer of the college's ath letic teams. FORA CAREER • ABROAD • • . The American Institute for Foreign Trade offers intensive professional education for International business. * Principles and Practices of Foreign Trade. Export-import procedures, finance, accounting, marketing, ad vertising, international economics, industrial relations. * Area Studies Latin America, Far East, Europe * Modern Languages Spanish, Portuguese - - Applications now being accepted for September 1950 semester AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR FOREIGN TRADE • William L. Sch.urz, President Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, Arizona
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