PAGE EIGHT Thinclads Face Navy-Villanova f Quantico During Easter Holiday There won't be any Easter holiday for the Lion track team. Penn State’s thinclads travel to “confederate land” during the vacation to open their 1957 season. Saturday Coach Chick Werner’s cindermen visit Annapolis to face Navy and Villanova in a triangular engagement and three days later they meet the Quantico Ma rines in Quantico. Va. Senior captain Rod Perry, a three-year vet, and monogram winner Dick Winston will supply the one-two punch in the hurdles. They will join letterman Ogier Norris to furnish the power in the high jump. Ed Moran, Ron Lewis, and Chuck King will handle the 880 while Moran and King will join Clem Schoenbeck for the mile. John Tullar, Jim Wambold, and Frank Urban will handle the dis cus. The- 440, .nile. two mile, mile relay, and javelin are question marks to Werner, although he feels they could surprise. Letter man Jim Norton and Dave .Nash will handle the 440 with the two mile being taken by Fred Kerr and Schoenbeck. The relay team will come from the likes of Norton, Nash, Lewis, Moran, Chet Cotton, and Buster Thomas. Letterman Dick Coats and Jim Durdan will be entered in the javelin throw. Originally. Werner had in- j eluded the pole vault among his I strong events but a shoulder in- j jury to Harry Fuehrer in prac- j lice Saturday dimmed that event somewhat. With Fuehrer ’ I out of action, Norris will bear the full load here. Don Woodrow, the cross-coun try captain, will also be left home because of a hairline fracture of the foot. Bob Parker, a talented high jump performer, may also be missing because of a job inter view. Thomas and Jim Moore will en ter the 100-yard dash with Thom as joining Cotton in the 220. Win ston, Moore, and Cotton will be in the broad jump, while the shot put will be handled by Tullar and Urban. Only new face in the Penn State baseball picture is sophomore sec ond baseman Bob Hoover, of Phil adelphia. He’s a rangy six-footer. CLASSIFIEDS ADS MUST BE IN BY 11:00 a.m. THE PRECEDING DAY RATES—I 7 words or Itw: $0.56 One insertion $6.75 Two insertions $l.OO Three insertions Additional words 3 for .05 for md> dtr of Iniertion. FOR SALE 1941 CHEVROLET s*pasi>. coupe, excep- tional condition, new tires, battery, in apection, radio and heater. AD 7-2269, Mrs. Hyatt. BEAUTIFUL DUP.LAP llugs. Call Milt the Rufrmxker between 5 and 11 p.m. AD 7-4957. He does expert work l SUITABLE TRAILER lodhtions. Sunrise Trailer Court, six miles from State Col lege on Benner Pike. Water, laun dry, garbage facilities. Call ELgin 6-446 after 6 p.m. LADIES GOLD Hamilton Watch, black cord hand. Reward. Please contact Lynn Ward. 347 Atherton. PLYMOUTH RAINCOAT at Phi Siaroa Delta Saturday, April €: has “Chief 'Levin, EaSton, Pa.** labeL 1 have youra. Dick Fisher AD 7-4409. ONE NAVY Blue rhinestone drop earring. Please call 128 Atherton. Lola Philips. LADIES WATCH between Gome Eco- comics Building and Thompson on Wednesday. Sentimental value. Reward. Call Becky, 1093 Thompson. WANTED il POST CARD with your name and ad dress to: Grindle A Co., P.O. Box €33, State College. Pa. RIDERS WANTED to Columbus, Ohio and Leaving Wed., April 17 at 11 a.m. Call Tom Hartxell AD 7-7955. NOTICE. SQUARE DANCING with the “Serenadera.** A few dates open this spring semester. Rlease call AD 1-9607. MISCELLANEOUS RHI KAPrA TAU Milkman’s Matinee is back to State. Spend a cool Saturday afternoon with Combo— April 27th. Every one Welcome. SOFTBALL PITCHERS: Any students in- terested in pitching for local softball ’team this summer call AD 7-2609 after « p.m. FOR FROM PI and expert radio and phono graph service stop at State College T V £32 South Allen Street IS YOUR typewriter giving you trouble 7 tf so cat) AD 7-2492 or bring machine to CSS W College Avc ITS HASSINGFR for racket stringing the No-Awl Way Latest factory equipment, tttMnpi service, guaranteed' work. Longer Jife to string and racket, fi. V Haasinger. Whitt Bsil or 614 Beaver Avc. after 6 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Frosh Thindads at Navy Norm Gordon’s freshman P c ’f on J ,er:^ 4 , 0 -r Ij, r y G £T rett ’ Ha mi»4i*t: 880—Engelbrink. Jim Thompson: Mile— cindermen will open a three- n Lw T surd.«-f|S meet outdoor season against thf» Naw PlpVipc Anril IQ at Dick Grosß, Hambright: High Jump—Mel me i'tdvy i leues ftpiu 13 dl Ramey< Campbell. Sharpe: Pole Vault— Annanolis Md Bob Waldo, Campbell: Relay—O'Conner, •rmtidpum,, tvxu. Sharpe. Hambrieht. Garrett, Emcelbrink; Three freshman records may Shotput—Bud Kohlhaa,. Andy Nyce Don fall against the Plebes. Dick En gelbrink, Who m the IC4-A indoor Landenberger. meet ran a 4:17.5 mile on the Lion’s crack relay team, yester- ' . , day unofficially tied Ed Moran’s Orioles Down Sens, 7-6 freshman record of 1:55.5 in the „ 880. Moran also holds the frosh *o upon Baseball Year mile mark at 4:18. Engelbrink WASHINGTON, April 15 (/P)— wl ~. € , and mile. The Baltimore Orioles kept ham- Dick Hambright, who last year ; mering away at Washington ;set a state high school record of pitchers today and finally, after ;48.7 m the 440 two-tenths of a ; n innings, won a 7-6 opening day j second faster than Art Pollards, victory over the Senators, freshman mark, will be anotheri A + 4U „ on Nittany entry in the 880. flmsh lt .^ as r , a “ 9^ yea . r * Tentative entries- - old Baltimore rookie. Carl Powis, loo—Jim O’Conner, Ai Freeman. Co r - wh ° knocked in the winning run Jneliua Sharpe; 220—Hambright, Freeman,! With a Sacrifice fly tO Center field. Q. And just what sold you on it? A. Lots of things, really. But when I saw I’d start right out on the work I’ve trained for, that was the clincher. Q. Sure you won't get lost in the shuffle ? A. Not there! I’ve talked with a lot of outfits, and it’s easy to see Burroughs is a company that’s pulling for you all the time. They’re convinced that young engineers are the key to their expan sion. And their policy's to promote from within. That’s for me. Q. Future look pretty good there? A. Great! They’ve expanded their engineering staff seven times since 1945. And with all the new products they have on the way, they’re ready for their biggest growth yet. Q. What's the bulk of their work—commercial or defense? A. I’d say commercial, for sure. They’re a leader in business machines and data processing equip ment. And that means plenty of work in mechan ics, electro-mechanics and electronics. But they’re in the thick of defense work, t 00... that involves research and development in ballistic missiles, electronics, computation, data processing, optics, magnetics, communications, and many others. "You’re darned right I’m sold on. that Burroughs engineering deal!” MORAL: Stay on your toes! Take your pleasure BIG with Chesterfield K? Big length—big flavor... and tb emoothest natural tobacco filter. Chesterfield King gives you mo; of what you’re smoking for. Like your pleasure BIG? Chesterfield King has Evrythlng •ISO gots to John R, Hendrickson, Florida University, for his Chester Field poem. $5O for retry philosophical verse accepted for, cotton. Chesterfield, P.O, Box 21, New York 46, Q Uctott ftl&tti Tobtcco 00. Q. I suppose they have a lot of places to work? A. Detroit’s the home office, you know, and their new multi-unit research center’s in Pennsylvania. Plants in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Michigan and California. Oh; yes . . . and in Canada, Great Britain, France and-BraziL Q. Did you go into company benefits with them ? A. They actually pioneered a lot of the benefits. You get hospitalization insurance for yourself and your dependents, secure retirement and educa tional aid programs, sick benefits, paid vacations, of course—the whole shebang. Why not ask for the booklet they put out. It gives you an inter esting picture of the whole Burroughs setup. SEND FOR THAT FREE BOOKLET TODAYI Get full information on’ the unusual opportunities Burroughs offers engineering students. See how fast and how far you, too, can go in Burroughs biggest expansion yet. Write: A. L. Suzio Placement Coordinator BURROUGHS CORPORATION Detroit 32, Michigan J TUESDAY. APRIL 16. 1957
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers