WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21. 1956 Santee Refused Court Injunction NEW YORK, March 20 (/P) —Wes Santee, America’s No. 1 miler, was shelved today. Justice Walter A. Lynch of the New York State Supreme Court refused to continue a temporary injunction Santee had obtained against the Amateur Athletic Union which banned the AAU from enforcing its lifetime suspension on him That means unless Justice Lynch reaches a favorable deci sion for Santee by Saturday, the lean Marine Corps lieutenant will not run in the Chicago Daily News Relays this Saturday. A Santee Victory Santee obtained a temporary injunction shortly after the AAU suspended him on Feb. 19 on charges of accepting excessive ex penses in meets last year. The appellate division turned down an AAU appeal on the injunction a few days later. Then Santee ob tained a stay of the injunction until the trial That made it three legal vic tories in three tries for Santee in his running battle with the AAU. Today, however, was all the AAU’s, AAU Atty. Louis Nizer told Judge Lynch the stay covered on ly the start of the trial and not the eventual outcome. The jurist agreed. AAU Spared Earlier, Justice Lynch threw out one section of Santee’s com plaint against the -AAU which charged its expense rules were “dead letter," That action saved AAU officials from being forced to take the witness stand and giv ing detailed accounts of their fi nancial dealings with athletes. Santee's attorney, Charles P. Grimes, had indicated he wished to cross-examination members of the AAU concerning the ques tion of expenses. Reports circu lated, too, that several former track stars had volunteered to take the stand for Santee. BILL AIRCRAFT IS worth a Secvmt Ym, and a third look too! If you'** interested in a future offering advancement, professional recognition and continuing challenge ... our representative it the man to see. With world-wide recognition for outstanding advance* in aircraft, missiles, electronic* and a diversity of other projects you'll find the Beil engineering team offers unlimited opportunity for building a great engineering career. 6 Fraternities, 7 Indies Win Volleyball Tilts Six Fraternities and seven Inde pendent volleyball teams chalked up victories in the Intramural Volleyball League Monday night. Two of the fraternity contests went the lull three games before a winner was decided. Theta Chi fought back from a 15-0 shutout m the first match to beat Chi Phi in the final two matches, 15-10, 15-4. Phi Mu Delta was also extend ed before winning. Phi Mu top ped Beta Sigma Rho in the first match. 15-10; dropped the sec ond, 13-15; and then won the rubber match, 15-8. In other fraternity encounters Al pha Sigma Phi beat Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 15-2, 15-6; Alpha Chi Rho defeated Zeta Beta Tau, 15-4, 15-12; Delta Chi topped Lambda Chi Alpha, 15-10, 15-4; and Alpha Zeta turned back Tau Kappa Epsilon, 15-2, 15-7. Two independent teams also had to wait until, the third match before registering victories. The Barters stopped the Taormina’s, 17-15, 13-15, 15-6; and the Iron Men beat the Rowdy Nine, 15- 8, 10-15, 15-7, The other two independent con tests saw Co-op beat Penn Haven, 15-5, 15-11, ahd the Old Men de feat the Fighting Eight, 15-10, 15-0. THE DAILY COLLEO'AN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Lion Gymnasts Leave for NCAA All-round standout Armando Vega will head a 10-man Lion gymnastic team that leaves at 5 p.m. today for Chapel Hill, N.C., in its bid for NCAA honors. The Nittanies finished second in last year's Nationals. Vega will be out to duplicate his all-round performance at West Point 10 days ago when he placed first in the all-round competition, far ahead of teammate Dion Weissend jwho finished second. j —* Coach Gene Wettstone readily rop e in 3.2 during his freshman admits that Vega carries the, year when he finished second in brunt of the Lion hopes. “Vegajthe Nationals here. m<M win the all-round contest. Rope Climber Dick Rehm. soph » well as place high in the par- omore Bob Foht who finished QUO' * "•tlcl bars, tf we are going to have third in the parallel bars tn the any chance for the team title, j Easterns—-and sophomore ring. . r. i man Ed Sid well round out the The West Coast sensation has Lion squad. his work cut out for him as he ; ~ 1 must participate in the free exer- jp*^^**—' cise, the long horse, the still rings,! the side horse, the parallel bars.l and the high bar in order to be in; .line for the all-round title J ! Should he place in the Friday' inight preliminaries, he would have to face the same schedule 1 again Saturday afternoon. He 1 will also vie for the flying rings' championship. Weissend Enters All-round Weissend will limit his activity to the all-round competition, where he is considered, according to Wettstone, as the dark horse' ,on the Lion squad. I Captain Tony Cline will enter j the high bar and the flying rings to be the only other Lion to com-! pete in more than one event. j Wettstone said that Cline's! chances for qualifying received a* big shot in the arm when he 'added a new routine movement.) ! Beiihrftldt In Side Horse I Sophomore Jack Beisterfeldtj [will attempt to hit his season's) 'peak when he bids for a first| i place in the side horse. Wettstone' said that, “He has to hit in his iroutine if he wishes to qualify.*') 1 Tumbler Bill Paxton will be] the lone Nittany entry in the; tumbling. Parton impressed Wett stone during last week’s practice) sessions when he added a new routine to his repertoire. | Sophomore rope climber Philj Mullen is expected to face the] stiffest opposition. j Mullen’s stiffest test is expected | to come from Garvin Smith, Los] Angeles State, who climbed the'' : , Grapefruit R >d TAMPA, Fla., March 20 The Cincinnati Redlegs rapped out 13 hits today taking their sec ond straight exhibition game against the Pittsburgh Pirates, 10-3. BRADENTON, Fla,. March 20 (tP) —The Kansas City Athletics rallied for three runs in the bottom of the ninth inning to day to hand the Milwaukee Braves their third exhibition loss in a row, 7-5. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 20 (/P> —The' five-game winning streak of the New York Yankees was stopped today when the St. Louis Cardinals edged them, 3-2, on an unearned run. ORLANDO. Fla- March 20 (£>>—The Philadelphia Phillies mauled A 1 Curtis and Pedro Ramos for 11 hits, including a 420-foot homer by Stan Lo pata over the centerfield fence, to defeat the Washington Sen ators. 7-1, today. PHOENIX, Ariz., March 20 (AP) —Dusty Rhodes smashed two home runs and a double today to help the New York Giants snap a four-game losing streak with a 9-5 victory over the TUSCON, Aria- March 20 (JP) —The Chicago Cubs beat the Cleveland Indians 14-7 today, scoring 10 runs in the last four innings while Bob Thorpe held the Tribe scoreless. It was the Cubs* second straight exhibition win over the Indians. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers