The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 26, 1951, Image 7

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    THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1951
Werner Opens
18th Season
(continued from page six)
champion Dick Shed to battle.
Discus and shot tossers Bob
Krayer, To m McDermott and
Dick Cripps have Manhattan%
IC-4A indoor champ, John Ogle,
as one of their leading foes to
morrow. Ogle heaved the iron
ball 51 feet last week.
Distance Medley
• Tomorrow's windup, the dis
tance medley, will have Lockie
(who is doing triple duty both
days), running the quarter, Mc-
Call the 880 leg, Bob Freebairn
1320 yards and Bill Ashenfelter
the mile against Georgetown as
chief opposition.
The Hoyas, if they decide to
double up, as the Lions must,
can - make things hot for the Wer
nermen in . every distance race
run.
Throwing the javelin Saturday
morning, Ted Roderer faces
competition eager to break Penn
Stater Nick Vukmanic's Carni
val record of 223' 10 1 / 2 ". Arizona's
Bill Miller has heaved the spear
226' in the past and Navy's Bob
Allison is capable of better than
225.
Nittany Owen Wilkenson has
Tony Pavone as' leading foe in
the pole vault Saturday. The
Seton Hall 'vaulter did 12'6" in
his school's relays last week but
Wilky has done 13' in practice.
Saturday Werner's highjump
ing duo, Vic Fritts and Jim Herb,
must beat CCNY's Carl Field
who leaped 6'4" - last week.
Veteran Opponents
Running a half-mile each in
the two mile relay, McCall, Bob
Parsons, Don Ash and Freebairn
or Bill Ash will have to go some
to beat Georgetown. The Hoyas
Dave Boland, Joe LaPierre, Carl
Joyce and Joe Deady are veteran
middle-distance men who ripped
off a 7:42.8 last week.
In the college close Saturday,
Lockie, Bob Roesler, Lauer, and
Kay or McCall are pitted against
Morgan State arid Cornell out
fits desirous of cracking the mile
relay record of 3:13.6.
Ima Sumac Soloist
On Musk Of Nations
"The Music of the Nations",
radio program of the Depart
ment of Romance Languages, will
feature Peruvian music selections
tonight at 8:30 o'clock over
WMAJ.
Ima Sumac of Inca descent,
who is noted for her unusual
voice range of four octaves, is
the soloist on these records. Guest
commentator is Sanford Shepard
of the Romance Language depart
ment:
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Rutgers Has
(continued froth page six)
starred on the freshman team.
The infield is composed mostly
of second-year men, but in Bob
Koperwhats, Case believes he
has a great shortstop in the mak
ing, and is building the infield
around the 18-year old soph.
Van Cleef, a .404 hitter in 26
games last season, is currently
hitting .421, while playing in his
regular center-field post. The
right-fielder, Ted McDonough, is
rapping the ball at a .410 clip.
Jim Monahan, the left-gardener,
is a great defensive outfielder,
and in 1950 batted .348.
The Lions will also be con
cerned with the pitching selec
tion for the Lafayette nine on
Saturday. He is Fred Kroog, a
big right-hander, who ha s al
ready hurled a no-hitter against
New York university, and a two
hitter against Army this year.
This job also includes pitching l 8
scoreless innings in a row.
Team Average, .392
The Nittanies plan to stick to
the same line-up that has carried
them to two wins so far this
Dairy Association
To Meet Today
The Pennsylvania Approved
Dairy Laboratory Directors' asso
ciation will hold its statewide
meeting at the College today and
tomorrow, Dr. J. Frank Cone,
secretary of the group, said yes
terday.
A brief business session will
open the program, with a series
of technical reports and discuss
ions listed for both days. Guest
speakers from New Jersey, West
Virginia, Wisconsin, Vermont,
and New York will take part in
the meeting. Dr. Vaclav Mares,
assistant professor of economics
at the College, is the banquet
speaker for tomorrow.
Local ,Flying Club
Redecorates. Room
The Penn State Flying club
recently finished redecorating its
clubroom at the Bellefonte air
port from which the club op
erates.
Curtains, slip-covered sofas and
chairs, a clock inset in a pro
pellor, and a large wall map of
Pennsylvania have been added, to
the room. Much of the wdtk was
done by the club's president,
Henry Myers and his wife, Eliza
beth.
8-2 Record
spring. The team is hitting at
a .392 clip, with Bill Hopper,
right-fielder leading the hitting
parade with a lusty .500 average.
Hopper has had six safeties in
12 trips to the plate. First-base
man Stan Lagonosky follows
close behind with a .461 mark.
Laganosky will be at 'first, Bill
Mihalich at second, Paul Mowry
at shortstop, and Harry Little at
third. In the outfield will be
Henny Albright in left, Sil Cer
chie in center, and Hopper in
right. Bill Leonard and Clarence
Buss will divide the catching
chores with Buss probably get
ting the call against the speedy
Rutgers team.
•Owen Dougherty will be on the
hill against Rutgers, while either
Bill Bair or Bill Everson will
take the mound in Easton. Jim
Kelz and Tom Campbell will be
held in relief.
BEL -EVE :..'.-.''i.N
YOURSEILIR!
Don't test one brand alone
...com•are,them
Unlike others, we never ask you
to test our brand alone. We say...
compare PHILIP MORRIS . match
PHILIP "MORRlS...judge PHILIP MORRIS
against any other cigarette!
Then make your own choice!
TRY THIS TESTI
Take a PHILIP MORRIS and any
ether cigarette. Then, here's all
you do:
1 Light up either cigarette. Take a
puff—don't inhale—and
let the smoke come through your nose.
2 Now do exactly the same thing
with the other cigarette.
NOTICE THAT PHILIP MORRIS
IS DEFINITELY LESS IRRITATING,
DEFINITELY MILDER!
Melchiorre, Ranzino Head
List Of Basketball Draftees
NEW YORK, April 25—(JP)—Eighty-six college basketball stars,
headed by all-Americans Gene Melchiorre and Sam Ranzino, were
drafted today by the ten teams in the National Basketball association.
Melchiorre, a 5-8 ball of fire
from Bradley, was the No. 1 pick
of Baltimore, which had first
choice in the regular draft. Ran
zino, tenth-ranking scorer among
the major colleges last season,
was the No. 1 selection of the
Rochester Royals, league cham
pions.
Other first choices were:
Tri-Cities-Mel Hutchins, Brig
ham Young; Indianapolis-Marcus
Frei berger, Oklahoma; Fort
Wayne Zeke Sinicola. Niagara;
Syracuse John McConathy,
Northwest Louisiana; New York—
Ed Smith, Harvard; Boston—Ernie
Barrett, Kansas State; Philadel
phia— Don Sunderlage, Illinois;
o CIGARETTE
HANG VE
means
ORE SMOKING PLEASURE!
itiP MORRIS
Minneapolis Meyer (Whitey
Skoog, Minnesota.
The three other members of the
Associated Press' all-America,
Kentucky's Bill Spivey, Kansas'
Clyde Lovellette, and Temple's
Bill Mlkvy, are juniors and could
not be drafted.
Hutchins was the most valu
able player in the annual East-
West college all-star game while
Sunderlage was the big ten's most
valuable player. Hutchins' team
mate, Roland Minson, was picked
by the New York Knicks. Minson
was named most valuable in the
National Invitation tournament.
Remember ...
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