TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1959 King, Engelbrink, Mile Relay Team Establish New Penn State Records (Continued from page one) would have won any average 880-yard race. Engelbrink hooked up in a thrilling duel with the Spartans' NCAA cross country kingpin, Forddy Kennedy, in the 2-mile run. The two stamina runners stuck together for seven laps, then Engelbrink pulled away and kicked out to a record smashing 8:58.9 clocking. Kennedy's second place time was 9:06.3 and the Lions' Fred Kerr finished third in 9:33. The third school record to fall was the mile relay standard. The fleet foursome of Don Davies, Schwab, Moran and Dick Ham bright navigated the four ions in 3:13.5 to trim 1.4 seconds off the old record. Davies- fan the leadoff quarter in 49.3, Schwab took the baton and circled the oval in 48 flat. Moran ran the fastest quarter in 47.8 and anchor man Hambright ripped off a 48.5 clocking to hit the wire in record time. Bob Szeyller sea a new meet record in ihe.22o-yard low hur dles with a sharp 23.3 clocking into the wind. The old record had been standing since 1938. Dave Truitt was just nipped for second place by Michigan State's Mike Kleinhans. The two clocked identical times of 25.2. John Tullar added eight feet to the former meet record in the discus throw. The senior weight man tossed the platter 162' 4". Andy Nyce and Jon Musser teamed with Tullar to sweep the discus points for the Lions. Nyce's 151'5" throw took secohd and Musser heaved 149' 5" for third. Bob Brown was a double winner for the third time as he won a wind-hindered 100 in 10 flat and the 220 dash in 21.3. George Metzger and Blaine O'- Connor were right behind Brown to complete the Lion GRADUATING SENIORS . . . Take Penn State With You After Graduation--- Dick Englebrink sweep of both dashes. Metzger fok second in the 100 and third in the 220, while O'Connor nabbed third in the 100 and second in the 220. The final Nittany sweep wast in the javelin throw where soph omore Jim Schwab hurled the! spear 210' 3" for the blue ribbon. Musser was second with 204'6"1 and Nyce was third with 191'- 71". Dick Hambright maintained his monopoly on the 440-yard run by capturing first place in 48.6 sec onds. Don Davies put on a spurt at the finish and trailed Ham bright by a neck. The Spartans' Brian Castle ran third in 48.7 in Korbini Memorial Football Trophy Junior guard Frank Korbini was awarded the Red Worrel Memorial Trophy Saturday he tween halves of the Blue-White football game. The award is given annually to the Penn State football player who has shown the most im-1 provement in spring practice. Last year the award was won by tackle Andy Stynchula. Saturday's B 1 u e - White game was the second of the season for the Lion gridders and it officially brought spring practice to a close. And for the second straight week, the Whites beat the Blues. But in contrast to last -week's game, this one Was a defensive battle with the White winning, 8-6. Last week they won 24-16. Both teams waited until the last quarter to do their scoring. Dick Hoak, playing quarterback for the Whites, put the Whites ahead late in the period when he plunged over from the two. He then passed to Nick Finkelston Join Your Alumni Special Senior Fee $2.00 and Contribute to your Class Gift at 'Least $l.OO This is Senior Week during which yoUr class agent will contact you for your membership `and contribution. ALUMNI. OFFICE • 104 OLD MAIN THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Anchor Man Hambright the closest finish of the day. Lion John Fareira tied with Jason Harnett , for lint place in the high jump at 6 feet. Tullar grabbed his second med al of the day in the shot-put with a 50' 9" heave. Spartan Al Neu mann was second and Nyce took third. Dick Gross won the pole vault for Penn State with a 13' 6" vault. Ron Beard and Dale Peters tied with Spartan Mike Klein hans for second at 13 feet. ' Michigan State managed to sweep one event as George Ward, Bob Elliott, and Jason Harness finished one, two, three in the broad jump. Wins Red Worrell for the extra point and an 8-0 lead. The Blue came right hack, though, on the air arm of Richie Lucas. He moved the ball down to the White two and then went across for the score. But Lucas was stopped jn his try far the extra point and the Whites won. the game, 8-6. Braves Dawn Cubs, 8-1 On Buhl's Fine Pitching CHICAGO (/P)—Pitcher Bob Buhl throttled the Chicago Cubs yesterday and the league-leading Milwaukee Braves carved out an 8-1 victory with Johnny Logan and Eddie Mathews slamming homers. The circuits top batter, Hank Aaron, added to the Braves' bag of 12 blows off loser Moe Dra bowsky and three other hurl ers with a triple and single in four official trips to boost his average to .488. Association Lion Stickmen Gain 4-4 Tie With Garnet Thanks to a third period rally, the Penn State lacrosse team came from behind to gain a 4-4 overtime tie on Saturday against Swarthmore. The Lions, playing their usual "Silky Sullivan" style of lacrosse, started off slower than ever as they fell three goals behind the Garnet in the first A- * * half. Terry Maisel, the Little Quak ers' former All-American high school star, broke the scoring ice for the Garnet early in the first half. Dick Quarles and Bob Hea ton added tallies in the second period to put Swarthmore Into a comfortable lead. But finally the Lion offense started to click as John Behne, the Nittanies leading scorer, cracked the Swarthmore nets in the closing minutes of the sec ond period. In the third period the LionS pulled a complete reversal. Dick Bullock started the scoring spree on a pass from Bob Swanson to pull the Nittanies within one goal. Swanson and Behne combined on the tying score as Swanson's pass set Behne up for a clear shot at the goal. The Lions finally broke into the lead when Dick Hammond snagged a pass from Behne and slammed it through the Garnet defense to give the Baermen a one goal edge. However, the Swarthmore squad was not down for long, as Maisel scored his second goal of the day to tie the score at 4-4. In the fourth quarter neither team could score. Swarthmore came the closest when a shot dribbled through the Lion nets only to be discounted when a Garnet attackman was charged with standing inside the crease. As neither team could score, the game went into a 10-minute overtime. However, this also proved to be fruitless, as neither team could muster a tally, and the game ended in a 4-4 tie. Coach Earnie Baer's tight man to-man defense proved effective against the Garnet offense as the Little-Quakers shooting was held down to a minimum. "Everybody played hard and did as good a job as they could," said Coach Baer. "We had al most complete control of the ball during the second half but couldn't get a shot past the Swarthmore goalie," Baer add ed. `We worked the ball around How to get into the Spirit of Spring Just slip into these deftly tailored items for the sophisticated male that put you quietly, but firmly, in the "best-dressed" spotlight. The big news is BERMUDAS by McGREGORI olive meteor $6.95 strip tartanic $5.95 POST GRAD WHITE DUCKS are smarter than ever. Don't envy his . , . wear them . . . $4.95 The combination you've long awaitedl Blue Cord BERMUDAS for $2.95 and Blue Cord JACKETS for $4,95 Come in and see these more-for-your-money values Dunks 6L. Co._ MEN'S SHOPTwo Entrances on West Beaver Avenue By BILL BARBER Dick Hammond . . . . scores tying goal better and our offense moved more smoothly. In general the team looked much better than they did in the previous two games," he said. Dave Fetter, the Garnet's top goaltender, was the main deterent to the Lion's scoring effort. Out of more than 40 shots the Nit tany offense fired at the Swarth more nets, only four got through. Swarthmore Coach Avery Blake had hir,h praise for the Garnet's showing. "We played Iwo fine games against Dickin son and Lehigh and we were going strong hi the first half of this game. But we sort of ran out of steam in the second half. However, I was very pleased that they worked as well as they did against a team like Penn State." Blake concluded. The Lion stickmen still have a chance to gain their first winning 'season in three years. The Baer men's record now stands at 4-3-1, but two games remain yet with Lehigh and Rutgers. PAGE SEVEN
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