PAGE SIX Unbeaten The honeymoon is over for Penn States baseball team. Coach Joe Bedenk's 1958 dia mond edition found out yester day afternoon that they couldn't survive on last year's reputation when undefeated Ohio State handed them a 9-0 thumping at Columbus. It was Penn State's first reg ular season loss in two years. Last year the Lions won 17 straight during the regular campaign and finished the year with a 22-2 record. Two more tilts with Coach Marty Karow's Buckeyes are on tap this afternoon. Lefty Cal Emery, the Lions' number one hurler, is slated to open the first game with junior Dave Simmers going in the night cap. It was the excellent mound work of the veteran Ron Nisch- Thinclads, Netters By MACK McGAUGHAN Penn State track fans will get their lust opportunity to view the Nittany Lions on their home cm der% during their dual meet with the Naval Academy this after noon. The Middies sunk the Lions during the indoor season and the Lions will be seeking revenge. There is a good possibility that the Penn State records in the pole vault, 440-yard run and the ;ma mile will he broken. Ogie Norris. the Nittanies' number one pole vaulter, will ho out to break the 13-6 1 / 4 mark set by Dan Lorch during the 1954 season. Norris set the in door record-13-6—at the Phil adelphia Inquirer Games earlier this year. He finished in a six way tie for first place—also at The 13.6 mark—in the collegiate competition at the Quantico Re lays last weekend. The Lion contingent in the 440-yard run will be made up of co-captain Jim Norton, Dick Ham bright and the versatile Ed Moran. All three men are capable of record h r e a k i rig, performances and they may very well slam the event today. Bill Schwab. George Jones and Moran are the Niltany en tries in the 880-yard run. Both Moran and Schwab have been looking strong in practice and turn in record breaking per formances. The record is 1:53.2 —set by Schuyler Enck in 1924. Moran and Schwab will join Norton and Hambright in the mile relay. Norton will lead off, Moran will run the second leg, Schwab the third and Hambright will an chor. The Lions may be strong in this event but the Middies are too. Jim Dunn, John Dettbarn, Bill Garrett and Navy team captain Fred March will run the distance for the Academy, Dunn nipped both Norton and Hambright during the indoor season and he will be out to turn in a repeat performance this afternoon. Denham and Garrett are equally fine quar ter-milers. March is the Naval Academy's Ed Moran Not only is he a top quarter-miler but he is also a Norris Quits as IBC Prexy NEW YORK (4) James D. Norris, multi-millionaire boxing promoter, Friday resigned as pres ident of the twin New York and Illinois International Boxing Clubs in a move that surprised boxing circles. He was succeeded as head of both companies by Truman K. Gibson, Jr., of Chi cago. a long-time assistant. Norris, 52, said he was yield ing both posts because of health reasons and on the advice of his physicians. He was stricken with a severe heart attack last fall during re•negotiations with Sugar Ray Robinson for his first middleweight title fight with Carmen Basilio. The tall, husky Norris, con tinues, however as president of the Madison Square Garden Corp. Gibson, a 46-year-old Negro, has had increasing duties in the handling of IBC affairs both here and in Chicago. The MI:lois branch of the Ohio State Blasts wits and Ohio State clutch hit ting which brought the Lion crew down from 'Cloud Nine.' Nischwits, a portsider with a 2.82 earned run average last spring, allowed only one Lion past second base as he posted his third straight victory of the year. He was reached for sev en hits by the Penn State nine but all of them were singles. In the meantime, he fanned six and issued nary a free pass. "His control was great," Penn State's baseball manager Bill Wallace commented in a telephone relay to the Daily Collegian last night. "He kept those pitches right in there and didn't give our players any thing they wanted." Gary Miller, one of the Lions' many two-year veterans, and sophomore rookie Larry Feg ley led Penn State's punchless * * * UP AND OVER goes Lion pole vaulter Ogie Norris. Norris will be looking for a record breaking performance as the Nittanies d this afternoon. It will be the meet the Middies at Beaver fie Lions first home meet of the sea deadly half-miler, The Middies' strongest asset is their depth in the field events. Top name on the field roster is Wayne Morris. Morris is a double threat—deadly in the shot put and javelin. He won top javelin hon ors in the Middies' dual meet with Pitt with a throw of 217-8. If he duplicates this effort to morrow he will break the meet record set at 215-2 by Bill Allison of Navy. Paul Mankowits and Larry Kaufman team up with Morris to complete the Navy shotput contingent. John Williams will join Mankowit: and Kaufman in the discus and •Al Swanson and Bill Schroeder join Morris IBC promotes the Wednesday in Chicago. night network television fights. Norris was not present at the The New York company han- meetings where his resignations dies the weekly Friday night were tendered and where Gibson fights on radio and television.,was named successor. He was be- Norris' resignation an d thellieved on a cruise somewhere off elections of Gibson to the twolFlorida. He has a home in Coral top posts took place here and Gables. Football Managers Edward Hintz, junior in busi ness administration from Wyo missing, has been named student manager of the 1958 Penn State ' football team, succeeding Paul Schonbachler, senior in science from Wilkinsburg. Elected to as sist Hintz were David Williams, sophomore in business adminis tration from Bradford; Galen My ers, Newburg; and Lawrence Wolf, sophomore in business adminis tration from Pittsburgh. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA inning. Fegley led off with a hitting attack. Miller, who had three hits in the Lions' first two scraps, raised his average to .600 with three singles in three at bats. Fegley was two for-four. Larry Bayer started on the hill for the Lions and gave up all nine runs. He left in the middle of an Ohio State up rising in the fifth in favor of Ron Riese. There was one out and two men on at the time. Riese was clobbered for a three bagger by the first man he pitched to, but from then on, he was as tight as a miser. He retired the next two men in the fifth and then proceeded to send the Buckeyes down in order for the rest of the game, including the last three men on strikes. The Lions' only serious of fensive drive came in the sixth in the javelin. The Midshipmen are favored in the sprints with strong squads in the 100 and 200-yard dashes. Bill Smoot. Randy Teague and George Van Houten are Navy's entries in the 100-yard dash. Teague, Van Houten and Dettbarn will run in the 220-yard dash. Penn State's hopes in the meet hinge on the results of the mid dle distance and distance events. Assistant track coach Norm Gor don has decided to meet the Mid dies head-on in three of their best events— the 440- and 880-yard runs and the mile relay. He has loaded these events in an effort to hit Navy where it will do the most damage. Sports ope... Czekai in New Post Newly-appointed business man ager of Penn State athletics is Edward M. Czekaj, who played on the unbeaten Cotton Bowl football team ten years ago. His predecessor, H. R. Gilbert, now is concerned with the financial as pects of the University's rapidly expanding program of student loans and scholarships. Penn State established an ath .letic honor roll three years ago to encourage classroom competition among athletes. * * * Baseball Team, 9-0 single but failed to move on two more tallies were plated Ron Hoover's fly to left. Ron in the third on a walk, single, Rainey, the leading stickman sacrifice and another error. before the game, forced Feg- PENN STATE 01110 STATE ley, but captain Don Stickler AB R 11 AB R 11 kept the rally alive with a sin- 4 0 4 gle and advancing Rainey to Fcatiey,:li 4o 2 D8%19;311 Haw.er.ss 4. 0 0 Okulov ach,2h 4 1 1 third. However, Joe Moore's ttrr•li I4 lanrtrl 2 infield to forced Stickler at e : 0 laracL I pStickler,e 4 0 1 Edaards,c 4 2 3 second to end the outburst. Noore,ef 4 0 0 Woehler.34 3 0 a Rookie catcher Johnny Ed- .I_,,litttil,,isnia`,Ti 4 4 0 ) l o Y u c a l :e n r g U —r lti l i 1 1 wards, a sophomore who bats u Miller:.lb 30 3 Nisehwitf,P 30 1 in the clean-up slot, paced the Baser.p 10 0 Holland,s3 10 0 Buckeye's with three hits in- Rims I 9 0 Weiselski,2b 0 0 0 9 eluding a triple in the first. H amphire,rf 0 0 Booth,c 0 0 9 Bayer started the game as Leppert,lt 1 0 0 if he was going to tear the r t e al Z uo. 14 1 00 7 fa T4 1 1: 00 021, 910 home club apart, whiffing the Ohm Stilt. ___ 212 130 000 x-9 10 first two men. However, he RBl—Raiuseyer. Barkstall, 141 wards 2, walked the next man, Bill Yeunegreseer 2, HaverKamp 2., Nischwitx. Ramseyer, and then dolled out E—Watkins 2 3B—Barkstall, Edwards, two back-to-back triples be- liatelKarrii. SB—Okulinich, Rarnseyer. Sac—Brlrketall, Koehler. LOB—Pena State fore getting the third out. 4; Ohio State 4. BB—Bayer 3; Nischwltti Another run crossed in the o. 80---Barer 3; Riese 4; Nischwitz a. second on two singles and an v i:l— l a il lr ; v ir for a in 5 1 ,5; Nisehnitz 7 1 for 0 in 2 , i 3 . Ball's— error by Dave Watkins, and ak•oe. w—lgitthwits.. L—Baser. Home Today Lions Meet Terrapins In Second Net Contest "We'll be lucky to win," Lion net coach Sherm Fogg said on the eve of the Nittanies' big match with the Terrapins of Maryland. A bit o' luck is always needed against a perrenial winner like the Terps, defending Middle Atlantic Conference champs. Besides having their usual fine * * * players, the Terrapins have the advantage of much "actual com bat experience." The Terps are 4-2 for the sea son, having lost their last two matches to Virginia and George Washington. The Washington score was 7-2. They own two wins over MIT, and one each over South Carolina and Clem son Yang was undefeated until the GW affair where he lost his first singles competition. Yang will meet Fred Trust today. Although Trust and Yang never played each other before. they have seen each other play in past Lion-Terps matches. Yang said last night of Trust. "He is a fine player: he really gave Dave (Freishtat, former Maryland junior Davis Cupper) a tough fight last year." Trust remembers his Maryland coun terpart as a "small, but tough competitor with a lot of heart." State's number two man, Char lie Bibleheimer, will oppose Carl Bucks, who also held that rank ing on last year's club. Bucks after a slow start has regained his winning form of last year. Bibleheimer won his only match, 9-7, 7-5, in a thrilling battle last week. The Lions best performer last week, Chuck Questa, will meet Don Schweitzer in the number three match while the number four Lion, Gene Flick will take the court against Tom Beall. Beall, a junior, is undefeated in six singles matches this year. Flick, in his varsity debut against Western Maryland, won his match over the team cap tain. On the fifth court today will be Lion Dick Jacobs and Terra pin Humberto Domenech of Puer to Rico. The sixth court- Is the scene of the Lion's only lineup change. Mel Royer, who Fogg said gave the most satisfying perform ance last week, reaps his re ward by . replacing Don Har nett as sixth man. Royer experienced his varsity baptism against Western Mary land, teaming with John Krall to RADIO Service and Seppkee *Car Radios oPortable Radios • Phonographs 1 , *Batteries OlsiP 411.- '" State College TV 232 $. Albs St. SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1958 By BEN BRONSTEIN win the third doubles match Today at 1:30 Lady Luck and Gentleman Skill will determine the victor at Beaver Field courts. \ 0 WILIUR JUST WOKE UP TO THE FACT THAT HES (14 CLASS! KEEP ALERT FOR A BETTER POINT AVERAGE! Don't let that "drowsy feel. log" cramp your style in class . . . or when you're "Muhl the books". Take a NoDoa Awakener! n a few minutes, you'll be your normal best ... hide awake . alert! Youll doctor will tell you—NoDos jiwakeners are safe as coffee. Mep a pack handy! IS TABLETS, 35e 35 big* NO OZ le bast, _ AWAKENERS Mel Royer . . . reaps his reward V 9 ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers