SATURDAY, .A.PWL 18, 1951 -;1-iOn$: Time Tria N. ' Slated 'FOr - TOday In an effort to see)ust what "his squad can do, Chick Werner will put his thinclacis through time-trials at 3 p.m. today on the Beaver Field oval. still undecided as to who will run at the Penn Relays for 1210 team, Werner will have to base his lineup largely upon today's results. Among the top holdovers from last year's squad are five distance runners: Lamont Smith, Bob Roessler, Jim - Hamill, Jack Chill rud and Red Holler. Other stand= out returnees include Jim Herb, high jumper; Dan Lorch, pole vaulter; and Ron Johnson, broad jumper. Smith who placed second in the two mile event in the '52 Relays and Loral who tied for second with a- vault of 12-6 are two men to watch. Although the Blue and White traek and -field squad has not competed in any' meets yet this season some opponents have, Ohio State University took part in three invitational indoor meets in three weekends last month. The Buck. eyes .participated in their first out door , competition last Saturday in the, Birmingham, Ala., Relays. They will engage in the Ohio Relays today and will be - matched against Michigan, Michigan State, Northwestern, and Pitt, among others. One of the \added attractions at the - Ohio Relays will be Marvelous Mal Whitfield, former Ohio State star and Olympic champion, who will attempt to break his world half mile time of 1:49.2. Michigan State will swing into action next Friday and Saturday in the Drake Relays, where the Spartan four mile relay crew will attempt to put a new 'mark in the books in place 'of the present American and Drake Relay time of 17:15.9. On the team will be John CoOk, Dick Jarrett, Jim Kepford and John Walter. The Spartans own the Big Ten's indoor high jump champ—Jim Vrooman. Last season.-the Lions were de feated in' t h ei r initial meet of the season by Michigan State, 91-40, as'two meet records fell. Herb posted a record height of 6-5 1 / 4 and Spartan, Bob Carey, set a new shot put record for the meet with a heave of 52-4 1 A. TRACK TRICKS: Only a hand ful, of Werner's crew showed up yesterday, as the weather con tinued. to be enemy No. 1. . State College high schoolers took part in a meet with Williamsport track sters yestei•day -- at Beaver Field. Lions Tie (Continued from page six) windy weather, and' darkness threatened from the early-innings. Finally with, no other alternative, it was finally .called in then-eighth. Right hander Keith Vesling• is slated to pitch against Rutgers-in today's game as the Lions seek their, fourth win of the season. The only indicated change in coach Joe Bedenk's lineup .is at the catcher position, Sophomore Art Cusick is slated to be„ - behind the plate. Bedenk announced this change before the squad' left on the trip. He feels that Cusick, who has a very good throwing arm, will be a better man against the running Rutgers club. DUGOUT NOTES: Vesling.gues after number three today'. . - Lions collected only two extra base blows yesterday—Kennedy's three bagger and Rex Bradley's double . . . Gingerich was very sharp in his eight innings of. work —has his fastball hopping, and curve was breaking sharp. Box Scores !Lafayette ' AB R, HI AB R ff.• Russo,2b 4 0 liVerzetti,2b 41 1 Weid'h'm'r,ss 4. 0 1 Kurte,ef -3 0 1 Werner,rf 4 - 1 1 Hogarty,lo' ' 4 0 2 Cerchle,cf 3 1 111,e4ey,lf . 4 0 0 Leonard,c 2 0 1 IticHardson,rf 4 1 2 Knae,3b 1, 0 1 Runt, 3b 3 0 0 Bradley,lf 3, 0 11Dill,c , . 3 ' 0 0 Kennedy:lb 3 0 11Dickson,se 3 0 ,1 Gingerich,p 3 0 0' ICetchel,p ' 2 0 0 I 7 .`utt,x . Q 0 0 ] Totals 30 2 7 100 002 00x , —.2' 8 - 1 .00 001 00x-2 . -.'7. 01 Pena State Totals 27 2 81 Penn State 0 Lafayette 1 HAVE YOU ;REGISTERED your license number . . for' free 5 gal. sample? • today's' license number. 6L11371 „.. _ wiMMER'S SUNOCO RVICE • • E. College' Ave. - 7 -THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLL E GE. FIENNOYI4V4NIA - * Red Hollen (Werner's distance man) :etas, PKPhi Score IM Volleyball Victories Intramural volleyball advanced further toward playoff time with 11 games played Thursday night in Rec Hall. With five teams and four games to play in each league, the evening's action pushed the season into its second half. In league B, Beta Theta Pi forced. Zeta Beta Tau's hand in easy victory, 15-3, 15-1. The win put the Betas at the top of the loop with three wins arid no loss es. Both teams are the A squads: Also in B loop, Pi Kappa Phi's A group took one the hard way from Alpha Chi Sigma A, losing the first set and having to fight uphill for the victory. 'The scores, which gave the Pi Kap's a 2-0 slate, were 12-15, 15-6, 15-7. In the E circuit Kappa Sigma's A team compiled a 3-0 record the easy way with a forfeit victory handed to it by Delta Theta Sig ma. The perfect account is the only one in the league. The•same league had Tau Kappa Epsilon chalk up its second win in as many tries when Alpha Epsilon Pi for feited. In league D the A team from Acacia succumbed to Tau Phi Del ta A,- 15-6, 15-7, granting the win ners their first mark oh the right side of the ledger. In the same league Phi Delta Theta and Alpha Chi Rho rescheduled their game for April , 21. "Phi Kappa Psi A handed Sig ma Phi Epsilon A its third straight loss of the year, in three sets. The triumph gave the Phi Psi's an ev'en 1-1 split. Scores, with SPE oiflop after the second set were, 15-12, 9-15, 15-13. Delta Tau Delta Aaccompanied its initial victory in two sets over Triangle. A, 15-6, 15-12, in A league, The Delt's have a 1-1 log. In league F, Alpha Sigma Phi A just" about managed to finish off a struggling Alpha Gamma Baseball's Big Leagues By Associated Press Mickey Mantle, the New York Yankees brilliant young center fielder, smashed the longest home run• ever seen in the Washirigton Senators'• ball park today and the Yankees coasted home to a 7-3 vic tory over the Senators. The best estimate as to the dis tance of the herculean poke was 562 feet. Mantle's hit caromed off a beer sign atop - the left-centerfield bleachers and went clear out of the park. ), Sal Maglie' weakened al te r pit chin •g 6 2/3 no-hit innings against- Brooklyn today, requiring help from reliefer Hoyt Wilhelm in the ninth to save a 6-3 victory victory for the New York Giants in their home opener 'before 18,- 307 fans. The 35-year-old curveball ex pert, a six-time winner over the Dodgers last season, lost his no hit bid *hen Jackie Robinson's high fly fell safely at the feet of Monte Irvin. in short left with two out - in ,the seventh. An error and Roy Campanella's triple, cost Mag lie his chances of a shutout. The Cincinnati Redlegs an d Milwaukee Braves traded 'hits' runs, and the lead freely here to day until the Redlegs shattered a 7-all deadlock with a three-run outburst in the eighth inning and then held off the battling Braves in the ninth fora 10-9 triumph. Ed Matthews walloped a two run homer for the losers while Rho A squad in two sets at 15-11 and 15-13. The win was the sec ond for Alpha Sig players against no setbacks, while AGR lost its second and has but one win. In the same loop Phi Sigma Kappa put up small complaint when Phi Epsilon Pi trampled it 15-1, 15-5. Werner Duo Win in H-Ball In Independent handball-doub les played Wednesday night . the Werner brothers, Tom and Jerry, beat -the combine of Petroy and Sorokach by scores of 21-17 and 21-5. Other matches in this di vision saw Flack and Georgic lose to Viever and Roderick by forfeit, Doyle and Bonello beat ing Zidanowski and Williamson, 21-5 and 21-6, and Goshorn and Geasa topping Jarr and Green 21-13, 17-21, and 21-10. , In fraternity doubles, three for feits were recorded. The two somes of Dunn-Messelrnan, Delta Chi, Follmer - Klaus, Sigma Pi, and Mclntyre-Kilmer, Acacia, took the easy step and moved into round three. .• • .... .. -.- ..•. . .• .„.. ... . , .....'..*.:..,. '.., ..,-.... ... --, ...'::' , ' ,. . ,: :::: .., :::: , ::.';;; : ' , ;:. -7 i , :.' , . , , , -.1• . .: . -;'... , ....;',:5...::::f".':•"•:::.': , i:::: , •. , ::; - ::::: - :..:;:7 1 F . ,•i,: , ....:•,: : . .'''..z..•• " — ?6 , liiii....4iioiliiiFOlif: - piiif!cir4ooi.;, - '....:.. AIRCHUD''' F , . ... ~....,...,..,.......,.,..........„.„........ ...... . .. has excellent opportunities for COLLEGE GRADUATES in AERONAUTICAL • MECHANICAL ELECTRONIC - STRUCTURAL • PRODUCTION A secure future, exceptional opportunities for advancement, and an excellent starting salary await you at FAIRCHILD, if you are one of the men we are looking for. We have openings right now for qualified engineers and designers in all phases of aircraft engineering; we need top-notch men to help us in our long-range military program: turning out the famous C‘,119 Flying Boxcars and other projects for the U. S. Air Force. Etracumn provides paid vacations and liberal health and life. insurance coverage. We work a 5-day, 40-hour week as a base. Premium is paid when longer work week is scheduled. FE ENGINE AND AIRPLANE CORPORAYION rt . ik" - AIRCHILDikaatt Jim Greengrass, Ted Kluszewski, and Gus Bell homered for the Redlegs, Greengrass' blow coming with two on. But it was rookie reliefer Bob Buhl's wildness that proved the undoing of the Braves. Rookie Charley Bishop, a sur prise starter, turned back the Bos ton Red Sox with a five-hit shut out and drove home a pair of runs as the Philadelphia Athletics won a 5-0 victory today in a game that featured the major league sea son's first fist fight. Principals in th e punchfest were catcher Sammy White of Boston and outfielder Allie Clark from Philadelphia. It was a short and brief battle in which Clark landed a good right hand to White's jaw. Matt Batts, fighting for the No. 1 catching job on the Detroit Ti gers, delivered a clutch triple in the bottom of the ninth inning to day to give the Bengals a 6-5 vic tory over the Cleveland Indians. • With the Tigers trailing by one run and Johnny Pesky on second, Batts drove a run-scoring triple to centerfield and, moments later, his relief runner, Freddie Hatfield, skipped home with the winning run on Owen Friend's fly ball. Cleveland scored foulr times in the third inning, two of three runs crossing on Luke Easter's 400-foot double. The St. Louis Browns chased 36-year-old Joe Dobson in a five ,run seventh to whip the Chicago White Sox, 6-4, today before 972 hardy fans who watched in gloomy 36-degree weather. The big Brownie inning broke a 1-1 tie which St. Louis had shared on Vic Wertz' first homer of the season in the fifth. Philadelphia Phillies at Pitts burgh was postponed because of rain. 3 Tennis Pros To Give Benefit Three tennis and table tennis professionals will be featured in. a Campus Chest benefit at 7:30 p.m, next Saturday at Recreation Hall. The trio, Elwood Cooke, San dor Glancz, and Peggy .McLean, will present a program of tennis play and trick shots of table ten nis. The headline event is sched uled to be a match between Cooke and one of the College varsity tennis players in a best-of-three sets exhibition match. A table tennis clinic will also be held, and students and faculty players will be given an oppor tunity to challenge Glancz or Miss McLean in table 'tennis. Glancz will also introduce the newly-imported game of jokari, a cross between tennis and squash, in the evening's program. Tickets are now available at 50 cents each at the Student Un ion desk in Old Main. ENGINEERING NAG ERSTOWN. MARYLAN D 11 Enter 3d Round in Badminton The intramural fraternity bad minton tournament continued on into its thiid round of competition Thursday with 11 well-played matches. In one of the closest matches of the night, Bill Rupp, Alpha Chi Rho, topped Jim Taylor, repre senting Delta Tau Delta, 15-10, 10-15, and 15-13. In other games played, Noyes, carrying the banner of Phi Gam ma Delta, beat Morris, Theta Kap pa Phi, 15-2, and 15-8, while Jesse Wachtel, Beta Sigma Rho, topped Lytle, _Alpha Gamma Rho, by scores of 15-6 and 15-3. Larry Cupka, Theta Phi Delta, beat Eugene Danser, Delta' Tau Delta, in a good match, 15-.8, 10-15, and 15-8. Gross, Beta Sigma Rho„ won from Anderson, Pi Kappa Al pha, 15-8, and 15-6. . Estabrook, Sigma Phi Epsilon, easily defeated. Diamond of Phi Epsilon Pi by scores of 15-4, and 15-4. Gillespie, Tau Kappa Ep silon, also won handly from Wel len, Acacia, 15-6, and 15-4. In the final four games sched uled, the final results were as follows: Vanner, Sigma Chi, over Alderdice, Alpha Chi Rho, 16-7, and 15-6; Brewer, Kappa Alpha Psi, beat Harter, Phi •Kappa Sig ma, 15-1, and 15-8; Boyer, Alpha Chi Sigma, beat Abelove, Zeta Beta Tau, by forfeit as did Zucker•, Phi Sigma Delta, over Maxwell, Theta Chi. Olympic Game Talk Renewed ' MEXICO CITY,"-April 17 (R)— President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines of Mexico opened the International Olympic Committee meeting with a brief talk today amid renewed hopes that Melbourne, Australia, will be able to hold the • 1956 games. With housing an d financing problems apparently overcome by the Australians, the chief diffi culty to be overcome by Mel bourne apparently is the Austral ian quarantine •la w concerning horses. Officials of the Olympic organi zation said that the question of Australian laws barring horses until they had spent six months in either Great Britain or Ire land, still was a major stumbling block, but the difficulties in Pick ing a new site for the games would be even greater. The Australian law is designed to prevent the introduction of several horse diseases, common in other' countries but unknown there. PAGE SEVEN
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