PAGE TEN Mojo THURSDAV By The Au AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 2, Beaton 1 Cleveland 3, Kansas City 2 Chinas* 4. Detroit 3 Washington at Baltimore., night W I. Pet. GB. 2 1 .647 2 1 .667 x -Baltimore New York Detroit Kansas City ____ 2 1 .462 Y-Washiniiitoto --- 1 1 .849 ( hicatto I 2 .333 1 l'levtland 1 2 .333 I Dutton I 3 .266 1 1,4 a—Playing night game. •TODAY'S GAMES lialtimmit at New York—Lora 12-7 vs Ford 11-4. Cleveland at Detroit—Score 2.1 vi. Hoeft 9-11. Chicago at. Kansas City—Wit/10. 10-8 ys Kellner 64. Only games schedules!. * k CLEVELAND (Al—Mickey Ver non slammed a pinch double to right center With two out in the ninth inning yesterday, driving in two runs to give Cleveland a 3-2 victory over Kansas City's Ath letics. Vernon batted for Jim "Mud cat" Grant, the 22-year-old righthander who went the route with an eight-hater in his ma jor league debut. it was the In dians' first victory of 1958 after a pair of losses to the A's. Until Vernon's hit it looked as if the big hat of Kansas City's Bob Cciv was going to he the deciding factor in a good pitch ing duel between Grant and Duke Maas. Cerv. who drove in both Kan sas City runs with a single and a sixth inning home run, now has 2 homers. 3 doubles and 2 singles for 9 RBI in the first three games. Roger Maris opened the Cleve land ninth with a single but was forced at second by Russ Nixon. Larry Doby then struck out pinch hitting for Avila. Preston Ward followed with a single to center and Vernon finished it. Track (Continued from page eight) to Ask;i , ,tant Coach Norm Gordon Ogie Norris is favored in the pole vault and this record -13-61/4—could fall by the way• side. Norris has already cleared the 13-6—his best to date—and just missed 14-feet at Quantico. Va. Fred Kerr, Dick Engelbrink and Charlie King will run rue m:ie for the Nittanies and Clem Schone beck will take King's pThce in the trio for the 2-mile run. Jim O'Conner, Bob Szeyller, and Barry Poust make up 'the Nittany 100-vard dash contingent. Ilambright, Noi ton and O'Conner are the Lion entries in the 220- yin d dish. Thinning the high hurdles for the N ninnies will be Ted Lopush in,,ky, John Fareira and Pete Koposak. Szyeller Will replace KupesA in the lineup for the low hurdles. The big names on the Middie squad—Ernie Pyle and Wayne Morris—are favored to bring home victories. Pyle copped the top honors in the high hurdles at Pitt with a time of 15.3. Morris won the jave lin with a 217-18 throw. The Frosh cindermen meet the Pl"bes at Annapolis tomorrow. Bob Brown, Don Davies, Herm Weber, Denney Johnson and John Musser are the best Lion bets to take first place laurels. Brown ran the 100-yard dash in :095 last summer and if he can d , tplicate this effort, he would 1 :itter the frosh and school rec ords Davies could break the 440 record if he duplicates his high' school time of :48.3. The frosh rec-I cid is :48.9. RADIO Jervire and Supplied *Cal Radios *Portable Radios *Phonographs .11) •Batteries • State College TV 232 S. Allen St BASEBALL irded Press NATIONAL LEAGUE Milwaukee $. Pittsburgh San Francisco 7, Los Angeles Chicago •t St. Louis, night Only Eames SChittitlita W L Pct. CB. a-Chicago ______ 1 tt 1.000 Philadelphia 1 0 1.000 Sas Francisco —_ 2 1 .60 Pittsburgh _____ 1 1 .600 Milwaukee ____ I 1 . 00 0"2 ) . Loa Angeles __ 1 2 .332 1 Cincinnati _--- 0 1 .009 1 7-St. Louis 0 1 .000 1 x—Playing night game. TODAY'S GAMES San Francisco at Loa Angeles--Worthing- ton 3-11 re. Erskine 6-3. St. Louis at Chicago—Jones 12-9 vs. Drott 15-11. Milwaukee at Philadelphia. 18-7 or Rush 646 vs. Raeford 19.8. Cincinnati at l'ittaborgh--Purkey 114 vs Kline 9-16. BOSTON (R) Johnny Kucks, supported by a Mickey Mantle homer and a Yogi Berra double, hurled New York to a seven-hit, 3-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox Thursday at Fenway Park. Mixing his pitches smartly. Kucks had allowed only one runner to reach second base un til Jackie Jensen's blast into the left field screen. Mantle provided what proved to be the winning margin with his first hit of the season in the fifth —the homer. CHICAGO (AP) Ex-Cleveland star Al Smith's first Chicago run production was a two-tally sin gle which started the Chicago' White Sox to a 4-3 triumph over the Detroit Tigers Thursday. Gerry Staley supplanted Early Wynn in the seventh with Tiger runners on third and second and nailed Ray Boone on a foul pop for the third out. The Sox went ahead in the fifth when Luis Aparicio doub• led and Nellie Fox singled, but Reno's Bertoia's solo homer in the Tiger sixth tied it 3 ; 3. After two were out in the Chi cago sixth, consecutive singles by Tito Francona, Smith and Bubba Phillips moved the Sox ahead 4-3. Buckeye 'Nine' Has 10-0-1 Mark (Continued from page eight) were in spring training in Flori da. Included among their "Grape fruit" victims were Rollins, Jack sonville, Georgia Teachers and Duke. They beat the Blue Devils, a perennial national power, 3-1 and 6-3. The tie was a 6-6 affair with Amherst. Since coming north, the Buckeyes have taken three games from Kent State and two from Xavier. Only six letterwinners return for the Buckeyes but two of them are hurlers—lefty Ron Nischwitz, 3-2 last spring, and Jim Rutecki, 2-0 in 1957 with a 1,74 earned run average. Another veteran mounds man, Galen Cisco—OSU's 'Cisco Kid' of football fame—was being counted as the Buckeyes' number one man this year, but he was recently declared now ineligible. _ _ Y COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA THE DAI National Sports Briefs NEW YORK (:P)—The $50,000- added Wood Memorial Saturday at Jamaica looms as a probable duel between Jewel's Reward and Martins Rullah, although a colt named Pundit could cause a lot of trouble. Jimmy Kilroe, New York racing secretary, said Thursday a field of six of seven was . expected for the 34th rUnning of the mile and one-eighth event. The Wood is the final major New York race for 3-year-olds be fore the Kentucky Derby May 3 at Louisville. night—Buhl WASHINGTON (IP) Lahouari Godih, French lightweight cham pion, makes his U.S. debut against Larry Baker of Mt. Vernon, N.Y., in a 10-rounder at Capitol Arena Friday night. Undefeated in his last 19 fights, Godih came to this country ear -1 her in the year to compare styles i on each side of the ocean and in the process get the feel of Ameri can dollars in his wallet. lomoivow INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION Pi Kappa Phi, Kappa Sig, ATO Win in IM V-Ball By SANDY PADWE IM VOLLEYBALL As -Intramural volleyball con. tinues, the league races get tighter and tighter. Every league, with the exception of League C, has at least two teams tied for first place. Wednesday night, Kappa Sigma took sole possession of first place in League C with a 15-3, 15-10 conquest of Delta Chi. Phi Gam ma Delta knocked - Phi Sigma Kappa from the first place dead lock with Kappa Sig by identical scores-15-9, 15-9. A first place tie developed in League B when the co-leaders, Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Kap pa Phi, both came through with victories. ATO spotted Acacia the first game, 15-17, but won the last two, 15-10, 15-6. Pi Kappa Phi earned the co leader position by walloping Sig ma Phi Epsilon, 15-0, 15-2. Alpha Kappa Lambda completed the v-ball action, beating Sigma Al pha Mu, 16-18, 15-5, 15-11. THE CHALLENGE OF . . . next Wednesday and Thursday, April 23 and 24, the Penn State Industrial Exposition will take place in the HUB. First hand knowledge of present-day Industrial activity will be shown by leading manufacturers. The product and operating displays are open to everyone in all colleges. The challenge of the future is starting today!! See the newest concepts in American industry next 'Wednesday and Thursday. Presented by the Engineering and Architecture Student Council. THE PENN STATE FRIDAY. APRIL 18. 1958 IM HANDBALL-DOUBLES Flight championships were completed Wednesday night in the fraternity handball-doubles tournament. Defending champions, Don Har nett and Bob Campbell, Tau Kap pa Epsilon, had an easy time winning the Flight 1 title- when they breezed by Ted Lopushinsky and Larry Lillicoth of Beaver House, 21-1, 21-5. Sam Minor and Don Robin son, Alpha Zeta, took the Flight 2 title, smothering Delta Upsi lon's Jack Maher and Jack Mc- Kenna, 21.0, 21.11: Beta Sigma Rho's Joe Fenkel and Jerry Carp won the third flight cham pionship defeating Sigma Pi's Walt Krauser and Joel Wads worth, 21-11, 21-10. TKE's Gene Flick and Charley Bibleheimer showed their versa tility by downing Paul Bauer and Tom Bursh, Alpha Sigma Phi, 21-5, 21-4.
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