SATURDAY, 19, M®. Indian As 52 One,'event, Indian-clubs, has been dropped from the NAAU competition for the approaching NAAU championships and Olympic gymnastic tryouts,-Gene Wettstone, secretary of the Olympic com mittee, announced yesterday., , . ... The event was dropped because of the small number of entries. Also taken into consideration was the fact that Edward Hennig of the Cleveland Turners,, 72;,; year old, “grand old man of'gymnas tics,” did not enter. Hennig. had Won the. Indian clubs title 13 times. Both the men’s, and women’s Olympic ‘ tryouts and NAAU championships will get under way Friday „ afternoon, continuing through. Friday night i and Sat urday afternoon, with the finals Saturday night. - •Ist for Women This will be the second straight time the Olympic gym tryouts have been'held in Rec Hall. Penn State was also host for the try outs and NAAU championships in the last Olympic year, 1948. That year Penn State copped the NAAU championship. ■ However, this will be the first ■time for women’s tryouts in Rec Hall. In 1948, the women com peted in Philadelphia. Thirty-eight of the country’s top women gymnasts will com pete in the two-day tournament. Nineteen of the 38 entries will be trying for Olympic berths.- Eight men and eight-women will be picked to represent the U.S. in the Olympic games at Helsinki, Finland this summer. Outstanding Gymnast Four members of the 1948 worn-, en’s Olympic team will' return to tiy, for their second Olympic team.. They • are Clara Schroth Lamady,' Philadelphia Turners; Marianne Barone, • Philadelphia Turners; Meta Neumann, Chicago Turners; and Dorothy Dalton, Swiss Gymnastic Soicety, Union City, N.J. Probably the most outstanding of the four is Mrs. Lomady. She was America’s No. 1 woman gym nast in 1948 and has won AAU all-around honor's five of the past seven years.- She- has won na tional honors on the balance beam for. eleven straight years. Mrs. Barone, also from the Phil adelphia Turners, has won three national-titles on the side horse and two on 1 the parallel bars. • Pa. Entries The Philadelphia gymnastics club will also, send another wom en in quest of an Olympic berth. She is Helm McKee who placed third -in the all-around compe tition in 1951. Three women entries from Pennsylvania come from Roches ter and' the University of Pitts burgh. They are Betty Rubino and Judy Hult from Rochester and Nancy Snider from Pitt. Miss bino is the 1952 Allegheny-Moun tain senior AAU all-around win ner, while Miss Hult captured the junior title. Miss Snider is a calis thenics specialist. Hermann’s Physical Training School at Philadelphia has en tered two tumblers, Jean Shain line and Vera Yuschak. New York has entered a strong, dele gation -in Dorothy Moran,' Calon line' Checkley, Arendine Osten dorp, Ruth Topalian, and ' Irene Zelonk. New Jersey’s entry of Dorothy Dalton and Doris Kirk man is expected to make a strong bid for. the Olympic;' team., Miss Dalton is a member of the 1948 team. ’ r Bostonians Top Marathon Field BOSTON, April 18—CAP)—Na tional champion Jesse Van Zandt, his Boston A.A. teammate, John? <ny Lafferty, and Luis-'Velaz quez of .Guatemala, top the 198- man field' for tomorrow’s famed Hopkinton-Boston marathon race. . This 56th B;A.A. race will have some influence on the’ selection of the ' U. S. Olympic three-man marathon team. The winner of next-month’s national champion ship race at Yonkers, provided he is an American citizen, will be chosen automatically. The other two berths will go to the pair haying the best average Score in the 1951 and. 1952 national cham pionship and .in tomorrow’s race. Clubs Dropped AAU Gym Event Jockey Gets Life Suspension In Florida MIAMI, Fla., April 18 (/P)—The Florida. State Racing Commission today suspended jockey Nunzio Pariso for'life for attempting to use an electric buzzer at Gulf stream Park yesterday. He was detected with a buzzer strapped to his wrist before the start, of the second race and the stewards immediately suspended him for 60 days and referred the case to the commission for furjher action. The buzzer is an electrical der vice used- to excite ,a horse and produce greater speed. Pariso, a native of Buffalo, N.Y., and a veteran of 15 years in the saddle, did not attend the com mission meeting. He was quoted as telling the stewards the idea, was his own and that he had hoped to , win enough money to return to north ern tracks after the close of Gulf stream tomorrow. IM Tourneys Begin. Monday Four divisions of two IM spring tournaments will begin Monday at the Rec Hall ’courts. Fraterni ties vill get underway with 1952 handball doubles competition be ginning 7 p.m. Monday,- and 1952 badminton singles play- starting at 7 p.m. Monday. ? The independent halves of the tourneys will begin later. Hand ball doubles play will start 7 p.m. Tuesday, . with the badminton singles matches scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday, ' Double Trouble Penn State’s twin gymnasts, A 1 and Frank Wick, of Philadelphia, will compete in the National AAU championships, April 25-26. J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test SOMEBODY scent Sheedy this note: “You’re a smell guy, Paul, but your hair’s against you! That’s why you’ve been , getting skunked in the race forpopularity.l wouldn’f even touch you with alO-foot pole cat! Betterget WildrootCream-Oil. Everybody nose it’s Your Hair’s, Best Friend.” Non-alcoholic. Contains soothing loose, ugly dandruff. Relieves ann< ness. Grooms hair neatly and naturally all day long. ] pass "the Finger-Nail Test. Paul got Wildroot'Creai how he’s whiff a new gal every night! So put on your suit, head for any drug or toilet goods counter, and bi or tube of Wildroot Cream-Oil, America’s biggest r smt tonic. Ask for it on your hair at ijhe barber shop, too. the girls’ll fall fur you! * ofmSo. Harris HiURd., WilliarnsviUe, N. Y. Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y. DAEL.Y COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Bruz Ray To Get No. 1 Tennis Post Bruz Ray, one of last season’s intramural fraternity tennis dou bles champions, has been named by Coach Sherm' Fogg to start in the number-one singles position for the 1952 opener against West ern Maryland at Westminster, Md., Friday; Ray, a sophomore and member of last year’s freshman squad, has improved rapidly in the last few weeks, according, to Fogg. Ray will take over former captain Owen Landon’s job. Landon, number one man last year, was lost through graduation along with Dick Weiland, number-two mail, and Bill Aiken, number three. Also graduated was / Bill Wood, number-five performer. Vets In 4 and 6 Spots Fogg also named this year’s captain, Ed Davis, to the number two position. Freshman Bill Zieg ler and Dez Long, Ray’s IM dou bles partner, are in contention for the number-three position. Lettermen Bill Forrey and Gus Biggott have landed the number four and six singles jobs. The number-five slot has not yet been settled, with juniors Bill Ray and Dick Gross figuring prominently in Fogg’s number-five plans. New Doubles Teams ", Three brand new doubles teams will be unveiled in the opening match, due to the loss of last season’s duo, Landon-Weil and, and Aiken-Wood. Aiken played on the number-two team and Wood number-three. Fogg has teamed Davis with Ray' for the number-one doubles position, and Bill Ray and Ziegler or Long-for number-two job. Vet erans Bigott and Forrey have been named for the number-three doubles position, Five Spring Sports Penn State will field baseball, track and field, tennis, golf and lacrosse teams during the spring sports season; Herm Sledzik Electe '52-53 CourtCaptai : Herm Sledzik, starting forward on Coach Elmer Gross’ 1951-52 basketball team, has been elected captain for the 1952-53 season. The six-foot, four inch eager was chosen by the letter.-winners at a banquet Thursday night. Playing his second year of var sity ball for the Lions, Sledzik was one of the mainstays which led the Penn State court squad to its first post-season tournament in ten years. He finished second to Jesse Arnelle in individual scoring. , -Sledzik played at Elders Ridge High School before coming to Penn State. In his first year as a Lion basketball player he suf fered a broken wrist in a pre season scrimmage and missed the first part of the season. However, he broke into the lineup in enough games during the latter part of the season to tally 80 points. 'Sledzik succeeds Hardy Wil liams and Jay McMahan, co captains during the past season. Mat Tourney Host Penn State will play host to the national collegiate wrestling championships at State College in 1953. What type of SUMMER JOB are you looking for? You have a right to be fussy about the summer job you choose! Before you take any summer job ... find out what a wonderful, profitable summer you can have ... when you work for Good Humor. Only Good Humor offers you all these advantages for summer employment: » y • Good Pay: — Many college men have earned enough money during the summer to pay for their entire college tuition and expenses for the following year! • Pleasant Working Conditions You’ll spend.your summer outdoors ... in the fresh air and sun. And as a Good Humor man, you’ll make dozens of friends among your customers. • Be Your Own Boss— Work full time or part time ... it’s aU up to you. The more you sell, the more money you make! And there's no expense on your part we supply everything you need. • Your Own Established Route When you work for Good Humor, you’re given an established „ route all your own. You’ll find people waiting eagerly for you every day. .. anxious to buy. A Friendly Co-Workers —Many of our salesmen will be college men just like yourself. You’re sure to establish several lifetime friendships with your co-workers. Look into this outstanding summer-employment opportunity. For details and ah application blank; write to the Good Humor branch nearest to where you'll be this summer. GOOD HUMOR CORPORATION 322 Rutledge St., Brooklyn 11, N. Y. • 115 E. Third St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 426 long Beach Rd„ Oceanside, 1.1. • 664 S. ISth St., Newark 3, N. J. 25 James St., New Haven 13, Conn. • 2736 Armitage Ave., Chicago 47, 111. 6844 Wagner Ave., Detroit 10, Michigan • 818 Bleigh Ave., Phila. 11, Pa. PAGE S 3 New Cage Captain Herm Sledzik New Scoring High Jesse Arnelle’s 492 points ing the 1952 season represe: new individual high for ! State basketball.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers