TPAP:i'ir? , MAT go, 1952 , Approximately 200 fiV,erriity and independrt hopefuls ill take to the cinders tonight when the time trials of the intramural running' events get underway, opening the 1952 IM track meet. Running events start at 6:45 p.m. The intramural thinclads will be gunning for positions in the 160 yd. dash, 440 yd. - dash, and the 880 yd. relay finals which will be run Thursday. Tomorrow night the field com petition will begin, featuring three event s; shot put, broad jump, and high jump. About 30' men have signed to compete in each event. The intramural department has asked that team captains or ath- Iletic managers report at the track not later than 6:15 p.m. tonight and tomorrow night with a com plete and correct line-up for each event. Each man competing in a run ning event must turn in a physi cal card to be eligible to run. In the, time trials, only the, six lowest times recorded in each event will qualify for the finals. Under this ruling a man may win a heat but still fail to qualify for the finals. Both the runnin g and field events will be scored with 5 points for a first place finish, 4 for a second, 3 for a third, 2 for a fourth, and 1 for a 'fifth. Baseball Parade By BARRY FEIN Who's gonna.stop Sal Maglie? certainly isn't Rosie RoWswell his "Picaroonies" who bowed the 13th straight time to the tnt righthander yesterday 4-0. shutting 'out the' hopeless es at the' Polo Grounds, the int ace won his seventh game the season and his last' ten arts. lie hasn't dropped a game nce last Sept. 13, when he lost ) the Cards 6-4. Flying Scot Bobby - Thoithon rove in all the Gotham runs with double and two singles to pace eight-hit attack. Veteran Howie Ponet,- who's yen having rough times this sea .on, dropped his fifth game. He's won one. In sharp contrast to the pir ate? "youth movement." the Boiton Red Sox kept their youngsters benched once ,again while their veterans knocked off the Detroit Tigers 3-2. Wait Dropo and Clyde Vollmer drove in the winning runs in the ',seventh with deep flies. Two more ,vets, Ellis Kinder and Mel Par nell came in to save ,the game for rookie •starter Bill H e n r y, whose record is five and one. c Bosox rookie Faye Throneber . gave the Bengals an unearned run in the ninth when 'he mis played Vic Wertz' single. Wertz , . reached second and scored on Johnny Groth's single to right. Baseball Bits: Bill Veeck.'s magic touch has jumped the St. Louis. Brownie attendance some 300 per cent over last year's at this time . . . You can be sure that Nats manager BUcky Har ris knew what he was doing when he acquired, Jackie Jensen and Frank Shea from the Yanks'. While Jensen is no DiMaggio in center, he has proved km can handle left. That's why Harrit: , giahhed eer4erfielder Jim Bus by from the White Sox . . . Ty Cobb made a lot of sense when he said' that baseball doesn't quire as muchbrains at . it used to. When was the last time you saw a squeeze play? Cerchie'-"rayloid Nab IM Horseshoe Title for..TKE By PHIL AUSTIN Sil Cerchie and Don Taylor, •.. Tau Kappa Epsilon, scored vic tories in two intramural horse shoe doubles \ matches last night to cop the IM horseshoe doubles crown. Cerchie, first-string Lion ball hawk, and Taylor decisioned Paul Eckert and Vic Straub, 21-14, 21- 14 to take the title, won last - yeaf by Lavin and Hazelitt, Alpha Chi Rho. . The TKE tossers moved into the final round by beating Her bert Budin and Sylvan Taub, Phi Epsilon Pi, 21-10, 21-12. The Eckert:Straub duo gained 1 !, the final round by defeating Rob ert. Miller and David Rudel, Pi Lambda Phi, 21-6, 21-16. - *- Japanese Flyweight Cops lAforld Crown `k TOKYO , Tuesday, May 20 (p)— Yoshiro Shira, a skilled counter- Puncher with a rapier left, last niglit brought Japan its first world ,% boxing title, wresting the fly iii6ight crown from aging Dado Marino of Honolulu. It was close but the decision Track Trials for Tonight Committee to Wimp NCAA District Titilist ' District Two's stand a r d bearer in the NCAA baseball sweepstakes will be made known next 14Fmday. Currently vying for the as signment, won the last two / years by Rutgers, are St. John's of Brooklyn, Duquesne,. Penn 'State, Villanova, Seton Hall and Delawaie. The first five are traditional contenders. A committee headed by EP pie Barnes, of Colgate, will make the choice at a meeting scheduled to be held in Scran ton, May 26. In the first year of the new setup, in 1949, four teams were named to engage in a District Two elimination seri e s. St. John's was the eventual win ner. Serving with Barnes on the nominating committee are Joe Beclenk, . Penn State; Charley Gelbert, Lafayette; Paul Amen, U.S. • Military :Academy; and Bill McCarthy, New YOrk versity. 'District champions engage annually in the NCAA's "Col- Nlege World - Series" at Omaha, Nebraska. Wins Tennis Match LONDON, May 19 (a)—Great Britain defeated Yugoslavia, 3-2, in the second round of the Euro pean zone - Davis Cup tennis play ing match which ended today in Belgrade. PAID Cptiriww, STATE pottfrG!. PmTsyproyt The TAVERN MENU • Tuesday, May 20 ITALIAN SPAGHETTI BAKED FLANK STEAK PORK CHOPS • DINNER 5 - 7:30 p.m. Reservations after 6:30 Hold I M Track Records Larry Joe Ex-Grid Star. Outstanding To Snap IM By DICK MC DOWELL When the intramural track meet gets underway tonight and to morrow at Beaver Field, six "re spectable" records will be put on the line. Whether any will be broken or not remains to be seen. However, if any of the marks are cracked the runner, or runners responsible will rate a pat on the back. With the exception of the 100 yd. dash time, all of the marks are far from being world records to be sure, but considering that they were recorded in intramural competition, they can be rated as excellent. 880 Rplay Mark The 100 yd. dash mark, men tioned above, stands at 9.9 sec onds, a good time in any varsity meet, let alone intramural. The mark was set by Sigma Nu's Larry Joe, former Nittany grid der, in' 1947. The 880 ,yd. relay time was set Golfers Lose -- - ' (Continued from page six) the afternoon's outing with a 71, won from Bill Thompson, 2 and 1; Bill Albert, State senior, took Tom Highfill, 6 and 4; and War ren Gittlen, lost his match to Mid ,die Larry Somers, 6 and 5. State wa s riding on a three game winning streak going into Saturday's game having previous ly beaten Cornell, Pitt, and Buck nen. In beating Bucknell, th e Lions scored their first shutout of the season with a 9-0 win. Now that the Navy's match is over the Nittany men will begin practice for their last match of the season. This Saturday they will' travel to Colgate. Returns to 'Campus Larry Cooney, of Pittsburgh, a halfback on Penn State's Cotton Bowl football team, has returned to the campus for graduate study. MARK STEVENS ANGELA LANSBURY PATRIC KNOWLES "MUTINY" "THE BAREFOOT MAILMAN" OVEN AT 6:00 JAMES MASON "ODD MAN OUT" Earle Mundell Still Running Efforts Cinder in 1950, and stands at 1:36.6, claimed by Chan Johnson, Earl Mundel, Don Carroll, and Jim Gilespie who ran for Alpha Phi Alpha. Don Ashenfelter, DU, was clocked at 51.4 for the 440 yd. dash in 1950, and that mark still stands. It also is an exceptional mark for intramural competition. . High Jump Mark s'Bl/2" In the shot put, Doug Murry's distance of 40 feet, 7 3 / 4 inches sets the pa c e for the intramural strongmen. Murry set the record in 1949. Hank Yorkgitis spanned 20 feet, 3 3 / 4 inches in the same year to set the broad jump mark. Yorkgitis' competed under the Theta Kappa Phi banner. The remaining goal for this year's thinclads is the 5 foot, 8 1 / 2 inch mark reached by Bill Harter of Delta Upsilon in 1948. In this year's competition, Al pha Gamma Rho will go after ATTENTION Seniors• • #rmy R.O.T.C. Air Force R.O.T.C. • Order Your Complete Uniforms Now • Delivery Made Prior to Call to Active Service • Pay Upon Receiving Your Clothing Allowance • No Payments Required Now, Display \ at State College Hotel Today .FISHKIN • BROS. • BRADFORD, PA. Factory Offices: Baltimore, Md. Washington, D.C. Bradford, Pa. Makers of the world's finest uniforms since 1860 ---121• Necessary Records its third - consecutive triumph. Last year AGR nipped Phi Delta Theta, 16-15 1 / 2 . The Alphas have lost their ace Charlie Wilson, however, and will have to find someone to take up the slack he has left. Top-Flight Competition In last year's meet, Wilson amassed a total of 11 points in dividually, placing first in the 100 yd. dash, and third in the shot put and broad jump. Wilson also ran as anchor man on AGR's first place 880 yd. relay team. In this year's matches, top flight participation is expected from the Alphas again along with the Phi Delts and Delta Upsilon. Whatever the out coin e, the meet promises to be a good one. It might pay Chick Werner to keep his eye on these matches. He might discover some much needed material as he has in the past. EMI SEVEN Don Ashenfelter Ex-Werner Ace
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