TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 12. 1257 2-Mile Relay Team Places 2nd in Millrose The Nittany Lions' two-mile relay team of Fred Kerr, Don Woodrow, Ron Lewis and Ed Moran placed second be hind St. John’s in 7:48.6 before a sellout crowd of 16,000 at the Millrose Games Saturday night at Madison Square Garden. St. John's, anchored by former freshman IC-4A cross country champion; Peter Close, won the event in 7:46.5. Ed Moran, who anchored the relay, turned in a particularly impressive time of 1:55 for his 880 leg. Other Lion times' were Fred! Kerr, 1:57.5, Don Woodrow, 1:58, and Ron Lewis, 1:58.1. Former Penn State captain Hor ace Ashenfelter took the Millrose two-mile run ahead of Phil Cole man and Vilianova’s Alex Breck enridge in 9:02-3. Fred Dwyer, the favorite in the event ; was forced to drop out with nine laps re maining because of an upset stom ach. Pitt’s Arnie Sowell} winner of the Rodman Wanamaker award as the outstanding performer in the Golden Jubilee Millrose meet, shattered the standing indoor world’s records in the 880-yard and 800-yard meter rtms.,- Sowell’s 1:49.7 and 1:50.5 at 800 meters and 880 yards erased Mai Whitfield’s indoor world marks of 1:50.1 and 1:50.9 Olympic 80B meter champion Tom. Courtney, who finished second to the slen der Pitt star, tied the meet record of 1:51, set by Audun Boysen. Hefily _ Olympic decathlon champion Milt Campbell ■lashed a tenth of a second off Harrison Dillard’s indoor world 60-yard high hurdles mark' of ATO Tops IM Play Alpha Tau Omega still holds first place in League B of frat ernity intramural basketball as a result of their 41-8 triumph over Phi Kappa Friday night at Rec reation Hall. Phi Kappa Psi handed Sigma Tau Gamma their fifth loss in a row, 30-27. Jack Barbieri’s 16 points was tops for Phi Psi. Mark Roller threw in 11 markers for the losers. Jack Feola and Angelo Guimen to both had eight points for Alpha Phi Delta to pave the way to a 22-15 win over Chi Phi. Alpha Epsilon Pi won their first game in two years, defeat ing Lambda Chi Alpha, 24-13.; Ho will BBiswr questions vital to your futuru •lie otrtiiM fli* record* of advancement* «mI offer you dnahr pppurtunM—. AIRBORNE INSTRUMENTS LABORATORY - Founded sad managed by engtoeen is a tetm effort ia tesesxcb *nd development in the fields of general electronics, automation, medical electronic* and nuclear physics; for industry, com munication, applied sciences not merely the military. Com pany policy which places special emphasis on mdrvidualijm, over the years has sees many advancements from within die ranks to top managerial positions. Liberal tuition refund policy encourages furtherance of engineering studies. REGISTER WITH YOUR UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT OFFICE TODAY - they have a complete file of information on AIL. Write for booklet "Freedom for Initiative" AIRBORNE INSTRUMENTS LABORATORY me. 160 OLD COUNTRY ROAO MINIOIA, l. I„ NIW YORK 7.1 is defeating Lee Calhoun. Ihe pre-meet favorite. Five foot, five inch Olympic, sprinter Ira Murchison equaled; the indoor world’s record in the; !semi-finals of the 60-yard dash in! 6.1 seconds. Murchison took the! final in 6.2. j The prime upset of the carnival; came in the Mel Shepard 600. Thirty-two year-old former N.Y.U.I star Reggie Pearman upset de-! fending champion Charlie Jen-j kins of Vfllanova with a 1:11.0 time. I Permanent possession of the! Mel Sheppard cup was awarded! to Mai Whitfield on the basis of; his previous winning time of; 1:10.8. Jenkins could have gained permanent possession of the cup by winning the event for the sec ond time. Pearman could have won the eup by bettering Whit-j field’s record. i Olympic pole vaulting cham- ! pion Bob Richards and runner- : up Bob Gulowski set a naw j Garden record of IS feel, 6 in- I ches. This is the eleventh ■ straight year that Richards has finished first in the Millross pole vault. Villanova’s Ron Delaney re tired the cup for the Wanamaker Mile by defeating Hungarian refu gee Laszlo Tabori in 4:06.7. Ta bari took second in 4:07.6. Martin Freedman and Art Cooper were high men for the victors with eight and seven points. Gene Hilty was tops for Lambda Chi with eight markers. Chuck Steines dumped in 7 field goals for 14 points to lead Delta Sigma Phi to a 28-19 vic tory over Sigma Pi. Bob Brandt had seven points for Sigma Pi. In Independent bah, the Green smokers. aided mainly by Joe Pekarek’s 16 points, squeezed by Hamilton 5, 31-27; the Dutchmen squashed AICHE 36-9; and Irvin Hall thumped the Campus Trot ters, 36-13. In the only forfeited game of the evening the Schorers jbeat the Bulls. An AIL PERSONNEL DIRECTOR IS VISITING YOUR CAMPUS for PERSONAL INTERVIEWS GRADUATES & UNDERGRADS E.E., MJ.j PHYSICISTS for Positions as DESIGN, DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTION and REID ENGINEERS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Egli May Change Starting Cage Unit Coach John Egli may chango t said, we may do pretty well theiwas getting the team ready foe his starting lineup for thejrest of the year.” jßucknell Although Penn and first time since the Richmond! shootin S- the Lions’ biggest and West Virginia are in the back of Christmas Invitation Tourna-j most serious plague during the his mind. Bucknell is of the ut ment when his Lion cagers,P a ft three games, was their big-'most concern to him and the team, play Euclme ll tomorrow night I mo ‘Sfu ' the tou “ h « h « lule «»- at Recreation Hall. ! We’re getting the shots but not fore them - E < li feels as ‘hough ! Egli. in hopes of shaking the ;makin £ them,” Egli said. ;the eager* are in good physical from its second semester! Tough Schedule Ahead (condition for the grind. They es !Schwende-] Faced with the additional prob-leaped the Navv encounter with man and Tom Hancock on his lem of playing three games in'* i - ■ ~ , [first unit in place of Ron Raineyjfour nights. Eglt said he would n“ onlv rnmorbumps and bru,ies * n . d |and Bob Ramsay in practice Fri-jwork the team too hard for the! eve-ryone ls ex P ected to be avail ■day night. irest of the week, possibly for thej a hle for the Bison game. I Bothered by Slumps jrest of the year. He called Fridav' Both Rainey and Ramsay have; night’s practice “their last hard \/nrcit\# 'C' « n u nnt been bothered by scoring slumps night of the season” because of 7 » w mTOI of late. Ramsay, although playing the schedule. The Varsity “S” Club will hold good ball, has yet to After Bucknell, the Lions play its first meeting of the spring reach his scoring potential this Penn at Philadelphia Friday semester tomorrow night at 10 season. Rainey, on the other hand, night, only to return to Univers- P- m - at Delta Tau Delta. ‘ was the Lions’ top scoring threat; ity Park for.a Saturday night en- AH letter - winners, whether or most of the year, but hit ajgagement with West Virginia. 1 members or not are invited to at slump m his last two games, scor-; Egli said that his chief interest tend. mg only six against both Army and Navv. Egli, although pleased with the " preliminary results of his player-' experiment, said that he did not' definitely know whether he would go with the change as yet. He pre-i ferred to wait until the last mo-' ment, probably after tonight’s practice, before naming his start-! ing team. ; The Lion mentor was particular-] ly pleased with the aggressiveness; both units displayed Friday night.; “They were real tough . . . theyj looked as though they wanted to! [stay in there,” he said. “If we can! (keep it (the aggressive spirit),” hei ■ - --V- . *: ■'- s • ■ Y 'YYYwjv 5 > JUNE GRADUATES A General Motors Representative will be on hand to ansiver your questions about job opportunities with GM FEBRUARY ll r 12, 13, 14 and 15 Our College Representatives speak for all of aur many decentralized divisions throughout the country. They are familiar with career opportuni ties throughout the entire organisation. Including staff and divisional operations, GM Positions now Available in: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING • MECHANICAL ENGINEERING) METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING . CHEMICAL ENGINEERING AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING • INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING General Motors Salaried Personnel Placement, Personnel Staff, Detroit 2, Michigan COUNSELLOR OPENINGS For established Co-ed Camp. Poconos, Pa. Group Heads. Trip and Pioneering (3-5 day out-of-camp trips); Dra matics, Music, Arts and Crafts assist; ARC assist; small craft instruction; general (Phys. Ed major). Write back ground, experience, salary, etc., to: ISS Lughara Street CHEMISTRY • PHYSICS • CERAMICS MATHEMATICS AND ACCOUNTING —for Men and Women— JOSEPH LAUS Brooklyn 3S. New York and can answer your questions fully* We cordially invite June graduates, and those graduating this summer, to arrange an appointment through your College Placement Office on one of the above listed dates. PAGE SEVEN ' ' ' ;_' iV-t $
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers