PACE EIGHT Navy Humbles Stickmen, 16-2 Navy visited its "cousins" on the lacrosse field Saturday and promptly rolled up its third consecutive victory by lacing the Lions, 16-2. The loss was the second in as many years for the Lion stickmen to the Annapolis Middies. Led by senior Ed Turner, who scored four goals, the Middies took a two goal edge in the first quarter and then broke loose to tally six goals in the second, five In the third, and finished with three in the fourth, The Lions, held scoreless the first half, scored their only points in the third quarter when Bob Bahrenburg scored at 6:34 and was followed later in the period by Joe Erwin, who picked off a pass from Ken Chestnut and bounced it in the net. Beagle Scores First The game was six minutes old before Ron Beagle, all-American football player, tallied. The Lions played a zone defense and held the scoring down in the first quarter. But in the second period the Middies caught fire and scored six goals in 11 minutes. The midshipmen came out fast for the second half and added three goals in the first four min utes, two by Si Ulcikas. Then Bahrenburg and Erwin scored but Navy, who won the national championship last year, came back with two more goals to lead 13-2. Empties Bench Coach Nick Thiel then emptied his bench in an effort to give his substitutes much needed exper ience. Navy finished the scoring with three goals as Turner threw in two and Dick Walsh tallied one. There was no outstanding play er on the field for the Lions with the exception of Bob Bullock who played his typical heads up ball game on defense. For Navy Turn er and Beagle dominated play. Beagle showed good speed and deceptive dodging, while Turner flashed great scoring ability throughout the afternoon. Besides being slightly out classed, the Nittanies demonstrat ed poor passing and ball hand- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • . SEMI-FORMAL i . ••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• By FRAN FANUCCI ling. And this, coupled with their inability to pick up ground balls, spelled their defeat. The freshman team did little better than the varsity, as it beat the Lewisburg Lacrosse Club 14-8, as Fred Kamps and Jack Behne scored nine goals between them. NEW LEICA Camera, f. 2 lens, speed 600, flash sync. Also Weston meter. Reason able offers considered. Call AD 7-4096 evenings. SILENT SMITH CORONA portable, like new. Call AD 8-9188 ask for Fred. 1951 NASH Ambassador hydra-matte, radio, heater, beds (BF) plus other extras. Call Weiner AD 7-4933. 1949 OLDSMOBILE, has only 37,000 miles $430. Phone AD 8-8886. BRAND NEW RCA "personal" portable radio—s2s. ; 303 caliber rifle, custom made. $30., excellent condition. Call AD 7-4712. " TUXEDO, size N. Excellent condition. Call ADams 7-3851. GOLF CLUBS I One set used men's woods, - may be seen at University Golf Shop. 1954 DODGE CORONET Station Wagon, 6 cylinder, radio, heater, customized in terior, undercoated. Trade or cash. Al) 8-8961. '49 CHEVROLET Convertible condition. Call Doug Matami AD 7-2897. 184 W. Fairmount Ave. 1962 CHEVROLET 2 door Deluxe. All ac- cessaries. Excellent condition. 16.000 miles. Call ext. 2r224 Dr. Tu between 9 and 12 a.m. 1960 BSA Motorcycle engine completely rebuilt, mechanically excellent, new clutch. running gear, rubber fair. $145. Jim, AD 7-4444. NEW LEICA Camera, F-Z lens, speed 600, flash sync. Also Weston meter. Reasonable offers considered. Call AD 7-9096 evenings. 13,000 Readers See These Ads • ASK HER FOR A DATE TODAY! • THE SENIOR CLASS PROUDLY PRESENTS AND HIS ORCHESTRA FRIDAY, MAY 13 SENIOR BALL Recreation Hall $5.00 Per Couple TM! DAtLY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE Excellent NEIL HEFTI The Best Weekend of the Year! DANCING 9 to 1 Netmen Lose Opener to Penn Taking everything home with them but the nets, the University of Pennsylvania smothered Penn State in their tennis opener Saturday, 8-1. Only junior Chuck Christiansen saved the Lions from a com plete whitewash when he came from behind to defeat Penn's Gil Van Wooden. Coach Sherm Fogg will again send his squad after their first win of the season today, when the Lions travel to College Park to oppose the University of Maryland. After dropping the first set to Van Wooden, 8-3, Christiansen was trailing in the second, 5-2, when he pulled it from the fire to register a 7-5 win. Van Wooden had the Lion netman at match point on three occasions only to wilt under Christiansen's steady attack. The Penn man cracked in the third set as Christiansen rolled to a 6-1 victory. In capturing five out of six single matches and sweeping all three doubles contests, the Ivy League squad displayed a brand of tennis that spelled practice and more practice. Penn's number one man, Char ley Reiger, started the,Quakers on their way when he displayed a strong forehand and surprising LOST PAIR OF GLASSES in a brown leather case before Easter vacation. Finder please call Bill Frey AD 7-3032. DIETZGEN SLIDE RULE, black leather case, somewhere on campus. Contact John SOS. Pollock 14, if found. BROWN LEATHER Briefcase, vicinity of Carnegie Hall before Easter. Valuable papers. Name inside. Contact Jim Rouser, ext. 290. FOR RENT FURNISHED APARTMENT—two rooms and bath, first floor, Bellefonte. Call EL: in 54448 after 5:80 ..m. $6O. H i '1 PASSENGERS WANTED to Northampton, Maas. Leaving Fri.. April 22 at noon, returning Sunday. Call Bill Hume AD 7-4969. WORK WANTED EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires typ- ing andjor shorthand evenings. Fast service. Reasonable rates. Dial AD 8-6943. MISCELLANEOUS EXPERT TYPING of theses and upper class term papers. Accuracy guaranteed Call ADams 7-3341. ANYONE INTERESTED in cheap air pass age to and from Europe this summer contact Neal Robinson, Sigma Pi AD 7.4928 for further details. IN ORDER to insure prompt delivery Sally's will deliver only the perfect Pizza. Sunday thru Saturday AD 7-2373. WHEN YOUR typewriter needs repairs just dial Al) 7-2492 or bring machine to 638 W. College Ave. Will pick up and deliver. The Great returns in defeating the Lions' Bill Zeigler, 6-1, 6-2. Sherm Fogg's number two man, Ed Seiling, fared no better as he was de feated 6-0, 6-4 by Penn's Morris Krome. Larry Adler .almost pulled the trick, after rallying to take the second set, 7-5, but withered against Ted Gillespie in the final ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••s••••• SATURDAY, MAY 14 Tennis -- Syracuse Baseball Pittsburgh Fraternity Dances • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Track Boston tvestow, Am. vv. vpss set and dropped it, 6-3. John Cleary was defeated by Penn's Ted Moock, 6-4, 6-0 and Dean Mullen also bowed before the Quaker's Ben Brown, 6-2, 6-3. Reiger and Krome combined to win the first doubles match with Moock and Brown and Gillespie and Paul Bierly finishing the dou bles action with victories.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers