s4#I I PAY,, MAY 10, 452 Golfers Meet East's Best at Annapolis Today Yale Bulldogs Rated Favorites To Capture 1952 EIGA Title By TED SOENS The only undefeated team on campus, the Nittany Lion golfers, will be out to gain added experience today and tomorrow as they face the East's top college golfers at Anna• poiis, Md. The Yale Bulldogs, defend rites to capture the team title in the '1952 Eastern Intercollegiate golrtournaznent. Their top man and probably one of the best in the nation to ,. day ; Link Roden, will alsd be de fending his title as the best col lege golfer in the East. - Starting, at 8 a.m. today, 96 Y' golfers will play 36 holes of 'golf to decide the ' team champion, while tomorrow only 16 of these Men Will play for the individual title. Only One Veteran For Stafe . ,the jolters will be Rod Eaken, Hud Samson, Gordon Stroup, .Toe'Webb, George Kreid ler, and Warren Gittlen. With the exception of Samson, State will be fielding five men who haven't played in College competition prior to this year. And all of these men will be ex pected`- to play on next year's team.• The veteran of the squad. Samson, is a junior; Eaken, the number one man, is a sophomore; Webb, medalist against Pitt, is also a sophomore; Stroup, a trans fer student from Juniata. is a jun ior; the other members of the squad, r Gittlen, and' Kreidler, are freshmen. Pitt was Undefeated As a consequence of this inex perience, Coach Bob Rutherford's team was rated a "green team" and wasn't expected to do so well this season. But so far they've won their first two matches, de feating Cornell and Pitt by the same scores, 5-2. The Pitt victory, especially, was a sweet one. Pitt had been undefeated before they met the Lions, and was heavily rated to defeat State. Incidentally; Pitt has a very good golfer in Bob - , Riley who is expected to show up well in the EIGA tourney. After the tournament the golf ers have only two more weeks before their season is 'over. Tho- - will be playing two home mater t next week, one on , ThUrsday against Bucknell, and the other on Saturday with the Navy. They'll wind up the year with a match with Colgate's Red Raid ers on May 24. BULT-TIN The Penn State netmen lost to Colgate 2-1 • yesterday on the away courts. The doubleS team of Gus Bigott and Dick Gross scored the only win, 6-3. 6-3. Ninety-eight per cent of driv ers involved in fatal automobile accidents in the U.S. last year had at least one year's driving experi ence. ERROL FLYNN RUTH ROMAN "MARA MARK"' MYRNA LOY JEANNE CRAIN "BELLES ON THEIR TOES" TODAY ALL DAY WAYNE MORRIS ADRIAN BOOTH "YELLOW FIN" ing champs, are rated the favo Medalist Against Pitt • t,, Joe Webb Handball Finals Set for Monday Ed Hoover-Art Betts, Phi Delta Theta, and John McCall-Louis Gomlick, Alpha Tau Omega, qua lified for the finals in intramural handball Thursday night. The 'finals will be at 7 p.M. Mon day. Hoover-Betts and Bill Waters- Roy Steller, Sigma Chi, were ex tended three" matches before Hoover-Betts won out, 21-10, 19- 21, 21-1. McCall-Gomlick edged out Owen Wilkinson-Dave Bischoff, Sigma Nu, 21-13, 21-20, to qualify for the finals. Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C., contains statues of five men wh o :istinguished themselves fighting . for the United States. They are the Marquis de Lafay ette, Andrew Jackson, Comte de Rochambeau, Tadeusz Kosciuszko, J. Paul ,Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OH Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail:Test "YOUR HAIR looks. as though it's been in the rein, deer," a campus Caribou told Sheedy. "If you want to horn in on the sororities, it might behoof a man of your elk to try - Wildroot Cream-Oil, America's Favorite Hair Tonic. Contains soothing Lanolin. Non-alcoholic: Grooms hair neatly and naturally all day long. Relieves annoying dryneas. Removes moose, r ruff. Helps you pass the Finger-Nail Test!" Paul got Cream-Oil and now no girl wonders whether he's man If your moose is cooked by unruly hair; collect a lift take a taxi-dermist to the nearest drug or toilet, goof for a bottle or tube of Wildroot CreamlOil. And asi your hair at the barber shop so your deer won't think herd down. (What she'll say will be moose-ic to your * ofl3lSo. Harris Hill Rd,Williamsville, N. Y. Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y. THE DAILY' CM.LEGIAN: STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA The Lion's Eye Legend has it that in Holland they strap ice skates on a kid before he can walk. Down Maryland way, U.S.A., they shove a la crosse stick into a kid's mitts before he learns to manipulate a drip ping popsicle stick. This too may be simply legendary among Mary landers, but they certainly wasted no time in acquainting Penn State's Harold "Bud" Wolfram with the facts of ,Maryland life. The diminutive captain of the Nittany lacrosse team was wield ing a big stick at the age of-seven in his Towson, Maryland, home town. Living in suburban Baltimore, the geographic center of the lacrosse world, Bud was exposed to a tremendous lacrosse environ ment. (Lacrosse is so much the rave in Maryland that the college games outdraw baseball's triple-A Baltimore Orioles on weekends.) •`""';" 7. Bud got his first coaching in the skull-busting industry at Bal timore Polytechnic high schobl where he played on the varsity his junior and senior years. With college on deck for Bud, Penn State had a lucky legacy his sister graduated from State in 1946. During his „last three sea sons on the lacrosse ten, Bud hag played a prominent role for Nit tany Coach Nick Thiel. The übi quitous midfielder has been more than conspicuous leading the Lions' switches froin attack to defense and back to attack, Bud, a tiny mite standing only 67 inches from the ground and weighing 125 pounds, has stood up surprisingly well for his lapk of stature and avoirdupois. Despite the pounding he has taken, Bud had never been injured seriously until last week in the Syracuse game when he stretched a tendon which will probably limit his action to one or two quarters today. Hustling Bud, modest and unassuming about his own prowesses, recalls his happiest day in lacrosse as the one last May when Penn State stunningly upset the crackerjack Maryland Lacrosse Club—a 7-6 victory which was a brilliant team performance so characteristic of Wolfram. New Warren Coach WARREN, Pa. (W)—C. Freder ick Bell, former Penn State ath lete who has coached the high school-football team a - t, his home town of Bellefonte the past three seasons, has been • named new head football coach at Warren. ' He succeeds J. B. Laidig who will continue as Warren's athletic di rector. Sports Thru By JAKE HIGHTON Collegian Sports Editor ~,;,:.,.7tr:- .. .79= 7 ...:77.7:i?- i ,„ .. ,t , •::; . ....""i:,::,!;•V:',:f_-....":' ; '. :1.,'... , ,-.." , : - -- . • '.• "::.--, _c::;..,...: , .....• '. ofC) YO ALVC*S U Gar menial SOME! - CHAT. \k .1 tIKE mADE. RAT WITH ITS -ME SPALDING..., THEY APE PLA'VEMIN MORE MAJOR. TOM MtNTS THAN ALL OTHE.R.TENNIS BALLS COMBINED TOR. A SHARPER GAME ..:a PLAY THE TWINS OF CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS SPAEOING 1 ,„..' 1 ":1 sets the pace in sports AU NEW VORIS SNOW BOON of Mullin Cartoons published in This book only. WRITE TODAY TO SPALDING_DEPT. C. 52 Chicopee, Moss. Attendance Hurt by TV NEW YORK, May 8 (W)—Tele vision hurts' college football at tendance—badly. This conclusion, along with sev eral others, was reached through a year-long study made, at a cost of $50,000, by the National Opin ion Research Center of the Uni versity of Chicago for the National Collegiate A.A. The NORC report, embodied in a 30-page . booklet replete with graphs and statistical tables, was released today after the NCAA Television Committee ended a two-day meeting to plan for a 1952 program of controlled tele vision. Other conclusions reached were: "Attendance is particularly off in those 'heavily.,, saturated.' TV areas where 40 per cent or more of the families are set-owners. EOM "The NCAA's 1951 experimental plan of limiting telecasting of col lege games succeeded in reducing television's harmful effects on at tendance. In 1950. • . the dif ference between the relative at tendance trends of colleges ex posed to television competition and those not exposed was sig nificantly greater than it was in 1951." Challenging previous studies, which seemed to indicate that television had only a temporary effect on attendance and might in the long run prove beneficial, the NORC study indicates a steady decline in attendance coinciding with the growth of television. BULOVA ... The gift off/ a Lifetime! MOYER W A I C 11 - SHOP 218 E. College Aye. State College TEE WRIGHts, DITSON IS THE Ot4LY OPFICIAL BAIL CC THE U.S.LIA. NAT'L CHAMPIONSHIPS SINCE 1887.... OFFICIAL IH EVERY U.S.DAvIS CUP MATS hciltauaAaii :...%~