THURSDAY. MAY 16. 19; Lion Sticl Hess Wi Everybody put their hands in the scoring pie yesterday afternoon when the Lion lacrossemen stopped a disastrous three-game losing streak by whipping Lehigh, 15-3. The Lion record now stands at 5-6 for the season with another away game with Cor nell, Saturday, and a home game with Penn next Friday, remaining. Star attackman Bill Hess was again the Lion high-scorer for the 11th straight game. ;or four more goals yesterday to give him 10 in the two- The southpaw attackman hit game trip against Rutgers and the Engineers. He is now within three scores of his own Penn State scoring record, which he set last year as a sophomore while earning himself honorable mention on the Lacrosse All-America. Although midfielder-attackman Johnny Steinmuller was . the run ner-up in the scoring column with 3 goals. Captain Lou Girard led the team in the combined goals and assists column. Girard had two goals and six assists. “It was simply a matter of good hustle and taking advantage .of the breaks,” head manager Harry Yaverbaum said about the game. “They had trouble trying to fake the Lehigh goalie out of position in the beginning, but they over came that and really swarmed over the goal the rest of the game.” Steinmuller broke the ice when he gave the Lions a 1-0 lead at 5:05 of the opening per iod. Girard hit for his* first score at 8:24, followed by mid fielder Kent Chestnut at 10:31 and creaseman Tom Seeman at 13:16. Goalie Jim Houck and the de fense held the Engineers ' score less in the first quarter but yield ed a single score in the second quarter. Hess made his first goal in the second stanza to maintain the four-goal spread at halftime, 5-1. The Lions continued Ihe 5-1 scoring ratio in the third -and fourth periods as Chestnut scored his second goal at 1:25 of the third, followed by Don Snyder at 8:05, Steinmuller at 10:15, Hess at 12:15 and Seeman at 13:25. Girard opened the scoring in the final period on an assist from football captain Joe Sa bol at 8:02. Hess added two more fast ones at 8:23 and 8:35, Chuck Carlson scored at 10:48 and Steinmuller closed out the scoring at 12:55. Driver Killed In 'soo' Tests INDIANAPOLIS, May 15 (/P)— Keith Andrews, 36, winner of the 1954 Pike’s Peak hill climb, was killed today in a test run in the car that was to be driven in the SDO-mile race by 1950 world cham pion Giuseppe Farina. Andrews had been averaging about 136 m.p.h. around the 2%- mile brick-and-asphalt track when the car slid 300 feet On the front straightaway. Farina, who comes from Turin, Italy, also had been having trouble handling the new lightweight car. It-was the 13th accident since the track was opened for practice May 1. Time trials start Satur day. ORDER YOUR 1957-58 COLLEGIAN SUBSCRIPTION EARLY SO YOU CAN KEEP UP ON ALL THE PENN STATE. NEWS NEXT YEAR RATES! s3.oo—a semester ss.oo—a year men Wallop Lehigh, 15-3; bin 3 of Scoring Record Top Lion Athletes Hold Intramural Track Titles The Intramural track meet, held annually during the last week of the spring semester, has had several top Lion athletes partici pating in its ranks during the history of the competition. This year’s meet will begin at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday on Beaver Field with trials in the 100-yard dash, 440-yard dash and the 880- yard relay. Trials and finals in the high jump, broad jump and shot put will be held Wednesday evening. Finals in the running events will be held Thursday evening. Several athletes hold track records. Frank Urban, a tackle on the-Lions' football team and a shot putter on Chick Wer ner's track squad, holds the lone independent record with a 42" 11%" heave in the shot put. He Set the record in his fresh man year. Buster Thomas, who is cur rently running the dashes for the Lion trackmen, set the IM high jump record of 5’ 10%” last year while competing for Alpha Phi Alpha. Probably the best known of the IM record holders is Larry Joe, a speedy, back on Bob Higgins’ eleven lii 1946. Joe, who com peted in the North-South grid tilt during his senior year, set the 100-yard dash mark of :09.9 for Sigma Nu in 1947. Don Ashenfeller, the last of the three famous brothers to run for Penn Stale, holds the 440-yazd dash record of :51.4 for Della Upsilon. Kappa Alpha Psi holds the oth er IM track records—the broad jump and the 880-yard relay. Three years ago, Clarence Watts. Jim Brewer, Wendell Toland and SatMiMstaieetitMMiaanaMiaaMeaMaaaieeiteetMMiffMttMMsilMMaftsttMfMMaiMitaMaaMuiMMMasMiMaiMfMtß SUBSCRIPTION BLANK MAIL TO: THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Name I Street : j City State ....... { «timmaniHi«aniMi«i<MMiMiiHMtMnHiiMittiiiain»iiiaiHiMutiiH«tM*aau<Hii4ntniniiinHNfamiM< ATTENTION!! ALL COLLEGIAN SUBSCRIBERS AND GRADUATING SENIORS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE- COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA By GEORGE FRENCH KDR, Phi Delt Win in Soccer Aided by football stars Milt Plum and Billy Kane. Phi Delta Theta and Kappa Delta Rho copped their leagues in intra mural soccer Tuesday night. The Phi Delt’s downed Theta Xi for' the League 0 crown, 2-0 on Plum’s two field goals. KDR defeated Phi Kappa Sig ma, 2-0, as Kane also had two tallies. Sigma Alpha Epsilon also was a league winner, defeating Phi Epsilon Pi, 3-0, fot the League M crown. Sigma Pi finished their sea son with a 1-0 triumph over Theta Chi. In other games Irvin Hall downed McKee V on corner kicks; McKee II defeated Co-Op, 1-0; and the Five Freshmen shut out Pollock 4, 2-0. Phi Kappa Psi won the League A crown, not Alpha Chi Sigma, as erroneously reported in Tues day’s Collegian. Eugene Wethers set the present standard of 1:36.1 in the relay. Toland also set the present mark of 21’ 0” in the broad jump in the same meet. Box 261 UNIVERSITY PARK, PA. $3.00 a semester—ss.oo a year ACT NOW: Mail the order blank today or sign in the Collegian office Lions Face Lehigh In Links Test Today Penn State’s golfers take a 7-1 season record into a “Nassau” match against the Lehigh links men today at Bethlehem’s Sau con Valley Country Club. Coach Joe Boyle will send just six men against the Engineers. The contest is run on a match play and best-ball basis, with two golfers from each club com prising each of three foursomes. A possible six points can be earned in match play, with an additional three markers award ed to the. winning duos in the best-ball column. Pat Rielly, Johnny Boyanow ski, team captain John Branish, BUI Davidson, John Felus and Bob Bainbridge are the Lion entries. Sophomore Davidson, star of the Lions* second-place finish in the Easterns, will probably draw the leadoff as signment along with Boyanow ski. Davidson'sports a 9-2 mark, in cluding'two triumphs in three tourney matches. Boyanowski, Bainbridge and Felus each have won seven of eight starts, while Branish and Rielly are's-3 on the regular season. Rielly played one: match in the Easterns, dropping! a 1-up decision to tournament medalist Earle Smith of Navy’s championship team. The Penn State Hnksmen have met Lehigh five times, and have yet to bow to the Engineers. Last season the Lions swept the field to record a 9-0 triumph. 1951 saw the first meeting and the closest match between the two clubs, with Penn State winning by a 5%-3 Vi count. Lehigh wound up second in the Middle Atlantic Conference this year. In addition, the Engineers boast the circuit’3 individual champion. Three matches remain on the Penn State schedule after the Le-j high encounter. The Lions return home to host Colgate on Satur- HAVE YOU TRIED THIS EASY TEST? Here's an interesting way io test a summer shirt for cool ness. Have your friends truss you up like a barbecued pig and put you on a spit. Then have them light a roaring fire underneath you. Then get somebody to keep turning you, slowly and deliberately, over the crackling flames. Do you feel the heat? Do annoying beads of perspiration break out on your forehead and neck? Are you uncomfortable? Does your collar wilt, wrinkle and curl? In fact, do you generally dislike the test? If any one of these things happen, you're not wearing a Van Heusen Century Sheer, the summer shirt that’s about A dressy, but cool summer shirt... the VAN HEUSEN Sheer. Select yours at Hur’s Mem i>hop Your Summer Clothing Headquarters PAGE SEVEN Johnny Boyanowski May Team with Davidson day, then play Bucknell at Lew isburg, May 24. and Pitt at home. May 25. The Panthers were sev enth place finishers in the East erns. WINNER’S SUNOCO E. Collage block * ro ® r Simmons Wholesale values on * all sizes. For exam- R pie ... 6:70-15 $13.98 ® plus tax Look into our deal . now if you have a re capable casing. g We Need Used Tires the coolest you can buy and which features the famous one-piece soft collar that can’t wilt or wrinkle, no matter how hot or humid it gets. The Van Heusen Century sheer Shirt is the summer ver sion of the great Van Heusen Century Shirt. It’s made of pique, that featherweight, cool weave fabric, launders beau tifully and (we repeat) it’s impossible to wrinkle its collar. Takes no starch either, so it’s always soft and com fortable. See it at your campus haberdasher. He’s got the Van Heusen Century Sheer in several collar styles. $4.00. Phillips-Jones Corp., 417 Fifth Ave., New York 16, N.Y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers