PAGE SIX Lion Stickmen Lose To Rutgers, 17-9 “This is the year that everybody we meet seems to have their best teams,” said lacrosse coach Earnie Baer before leaving on a jaunt to Rutgers and Lehigh. Rutgers proved him right yesterday afternoon as they swarmed over the Lion nets and won, 17-9. Lion attackman Bill Hess played a magnificent one-man offense as he scored six of the Lion tallies and assisted on ★ ★ ★ * a seventh. And all with a cast on - ... his broken right thumb. The All- j American candidate raised his r ‘ - season scoring total to 34 and is !: - • within 7of his own Penn State 1- ' '■ scoring record. On the defense, little can be H uid other than that goalie Jim [H Houck has continued his high * - saves-per-game average as he stopped 21 of the Scarlet shots. The All-Star nominee now has 209 tor the season. jgk But the game was Rutgers, from HS beginning to end. The Ivy Lea- ” guers, who have lost only three games by close scores to top teams in the nation, poured it on the defenseless Lions. They built up a 10-1 lead at halftime as Hess was the only Lion to find the range. He made his first goal of the day at 5:44 of the first period. Goal number two for the Lions also went to the south paw atlackman at 4:55 of the third period on a pass from creaseman Tom Seeman. A little later. Seeman shoved his own Into the nets on a pass from s Hess. Then Lou Girard scored . # » - number four, without any as- > / I * f end of .Mnksmen Praised third quarter found Rutgers hold- 1 ine an eleven point lead, 15-4. ! I Reserve attackman Don Sny I /M LJ I / dcr was the third and last Lion, f (J/ I (jllf fIP V r ICI V other than Hess to score. He made! v 1 * w / * *■ '-*■/ ie rte° re o£ £be £ * na ' Lion golf coach Joe Boyle combined generous praise with <3U Then Hess wound up his best disappointment in the aftermath of the 1957 Eastern Tourna quarter by hitting for four goals ment, which came to an exciting climax for the Penn State within the space of iwo-and-a- linksmen Monday morning. Sdfy in c^e 1 . ™ e t Lion mentor was justly proud-and at the same time at 12:10, his -fifth at 13:24 and a bit let down—with his club s fine second place finish in the his sixth at 14:08. Easterns. The “best six-man. While the Manhasset marauder.team” in the tourney failed by| * i ■ , _ ■ was doing the work on the of-an eyelash to capture the tham- Alph/s rUi DUa fcnse, Houck was having a field pionship, team honors going to:'' 1 !* 1 N*MI IVI day with the Rutgers attack. Al-the host Navy club by a scant 1 e*. « . , . f 4 though stopping 21 goals in the five strokes. 608-613. Only thc jlfTlTlfl IV [I Win time he played, he also had to top four scores counted. i 1 w¥ii| contend with 24 other Scarlet “We had an excellent oppor- T*jll shots that went astray. ; tunity to win." Boyle said, "but OOCCGF I 1116 S The Rutgers scoring was evenly we ma de some mistakes on Ihe 1 c . divided among seven players.) {evr holes. It was a real I Sl § ma Nu and Alpha Chi Rhol Only one of which had more than! tight golf course, and you can't jcopped first place in Leagues I two goals. That one was attack-; afford to make mistakes. At the ‘and J respectively bv turning in a'game with LeJ Cnd 2* 27 holes ' il was all «« Rories % intramural l^ccer hiJhThis'aft^nocfn'm 6 complefe! a tournament of mild n, 1 tlie triD There are a few nice! U a t ° uri^ m - nt m . 1 ..Alpha Gamma Rho won thel SmSs about the Engineer ™^ d r° £ 3 stickmen, and most of them seem L 1 ! n u, f n p 1 m he 3g i, ie .9 tltle ’ defeat ‘ to be concentrated in their earlySs bt sevcn Sd Navv bv Slgm3 T Phj Epsilon - j season loss to the same tough ad Hition BuUdoe 2?ar Pete'-~i? gma Nu downed Theta Delta gers ten. The score was 13-0. lss lasf f^vidual !o^^^^’ J' 0 ' t „ . , , _ . _. Ititlist, failed to qualify for the : Rpt , p £, a , n 0 shutout Zeta Ticket Prices Rise J playoff matches. Nisselson suf-;?®“ Hug J h C ° oper and lIVIVCI V I l\l»C !fered a disastrous first round,! Arlfphl tfnL produced th * two For Grid GqITIBS shooting an 85, and his 71 for) T . L tallies. rul v?l ,u the last 18 holes put him two! . Jun M°° re provided-the win- Steadilv mounting costs will |oV er the 154 qualifying mark j™!?® goat for Alpha Gamma Rho’s bring a boost in football ticket Dartmouth and Cornell tied for' 1 ’ 0 vlctor y over SPE. prices at the University next faU. fourl h p i ace in the team stand- Sigma Chi finished the season In keeping with a nation-fi n g S 626 strokes, and Prince-: Wl th a 1-1 record, defeating Siema wide trend, single game tickets ton was sixt h with 630. Alpha Mu. 2-0. Tom O’Hara and wjll be priced at $4 each. The, Bill Davidson was the Lions* Bernard Baymiller each scored a former price was $3.00. j low qualifier with a 73-78-151 g° al for Sigma Chi. Season tickets covering the; effort f or the 36 holes. The only In other games Phi Mu Delta four honte games, which sold last; other Penn Stale linksman lo turned back* Delta Sigma Phi ’ WIU be pnced at 515 ' was PaJ !*« comer kicks to one Alpha “ml- i, v r I fired 8 74-79-153 effort. Bob iZeta received the nod over Bea ultv and' staff**season * tickets'! Bainbrid 9 e also met lhe jver House also on corner kicks, , -n S ™ season tickets,] fymg u ne rounds of 79 and ,4-0. p£ce as W iast year “”1 S s ph S - le q- reCeiV K d 3 f ° rfeU win Because of the unprecedented resuLjng faom a three ' way -over Phi Sigma Kappa. homflml ‘S 10 . th f, fi , r u St Johnny Boyanowski and John home game against Armv, the r P i u c pach shot 155’s for the season ticket sale will not be ex-i £* 1 S c ® “„ S r ?, : i or fi tended hevond the Anenct -i ILIOIIS. Bojanowskl fired a first deadline J August l; r ound 78 and finished with a 77. oeauune; j white Felus notched a 79 and 76 Penn State became a charter for the 36-hole distance, members of the United States In-j Penn State captain John Bran tercollegiate Lacrosse Association'ish came in with a pair of 78 in 1926. : rounds for a 156 total. College Men EARN $lOO PER WEEK DURING THE SUMMER If you live in western Penna. and have a car Call AD 8-1177 Wed., May 15 Between 6 p«m. and 9 p.m. Thurs., May 16 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Bill Hess One-man offense .. Tom Seeman . . . two assists J<fo« n c X* m ' Uo‘ ls W i Have an evening "out on the town." And have it at the Town House. Superb food, atmosphere and music. Spend this evening with the Jerry Miller Combo . . . \ 8:30 / ' \ to I - ' \ 12:00 / ' Lion Tennis Team Hosts Bisons Today Captain John Pulizzi and Chuck Siede will carry Buck nell University’s tennis hopes in the Bison’s match with the Nittany Lion netters, slated for 3:30 this afternoon on the Beaver Field courts. Bucknell Coach Hank Pet number one position in his fi capable of beating the other, while vieing for the leadoff berth. Siede, a junior, had captured five of eight contests prior to yesterday's match with Lehigh, the same record that Bison Pulizzi. a senior, had compUed. In doubles play Siede's record was 3-3, while Pulizzi had post ed a 3-2 log. A third member of the Bison team, senior Jim Stewart is re gal ded as a top-flight performer by Peters. In all, Bucknell’s boast six lettermen, including John jFincke, Ben Hollander, Bob Poin dexter, Siede, Pulizzi and Stew art. In 1956 the top performers for Bucknell -were Hollander and Stewart. Hollander won 11 of 15 singles matches while Stewart, a Bison grid star for three years, copped eight of 11. Two years [ago Pulizzi established two Bison I net records by capturing 12 'matches in a row and 16 of 18 throughout the season. Coach Peters' pupils have had WEDNESDAY. MAY 15. 1957 :ers has used both boys in the irst nine matches and each is four winning seasons and on* break-even campaign in the . last five years. In 1956 the Bi sons finished with a 9-9 record and this year are engaged in a 16-game schedule. Bucknell has only been beaten by Navy and Colgate in eight contests, while the Bisons have downed Dickinson, Albright, Laf ayette, Delaware, Lycoming and Juniata. Last weekend the Bisons competed in the Middle Atlantic Conference tennis tournament held at Swarthmore College. Last year the Nittany Lions downed the Bisons. 5-4, in route to a winning season of seven wins and five losses. This sea son the Lions sport one victory in seven starts, that win com ing at the hands of Syracuse, 7-2, Saturday afternoon. Prior to that the Lions lost by 8-1 scores to Penn, Colgate, Navy, Maryland, Lehigh while the Georgetown Hoyas downed the Nittany netters, 6-3.
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