PAGE TEN Nittanies Beat Lafayette, Terps Behind Southpaws By JOHN MORRIS Assistant Sports Editor COLLEGE PARK, Md., April 24 Ed Kikla and Al Gursky combined to give Penn State a 5-3 victory over Maryland here today. The win, coupled with Satur day's rain-shortened 3-2 victory over Lafayette, pushed the Lions' record to 3-1. Lafayette is now 6-6-1 and the loss drops Mary land's log to 6-8. Lefty Tom Durbin stopped the Leopards on three hits Saturday before the rain came in the home fifth. Kilda, another southpaw, cooled Maryland's hats today as the tem perature soared to the high 80's on Shipley Field. Kilda (2-0) was almost untouch able except for the sixth inning when the Terps scored all their runs. The game was scoreless until the Nitiany half of the sixth when they pushed one run MEM Bart (Bronco) Brodkin led off by beating out a grounder to deep short. Don Robinson sacrificed him to second and Brodkin scored on Dick Pae's two-bagger to left. The Terps shot into the lead in their half of the inning on two bloops and George Klinedinst's blast over the left-field fence. Second-baseman Dick Taylor popped one down the right field line and Don Brown moved Taylor to third with another bloop single. Then Klinedinst unloaded and Maryland had a :?-1 lead. Gursky evened things up in a hurry in the Lion seventh. Lanky John Phillips led off the frame with a walk and Gur sky promptly lofted a fast ball over the left field fence to knot the score, 3-3. But the Lions weren't finished with Tcrp hurler Bill Turner. Turner got first-sacker Barry LAFAYETTE PENN STATE Ab R H Ab R H TiartoA,er 3 0 0 Flrffilk in,2lb 3 0 0 1.yt1e,21, 2 0 0 Wohinsim,3b 3 1 1 Morgan,2b 0 0 0 Pae,ef 2 1 1 Moyer,sm 2 0 0 DeLong.rf 1 0 1 P4vilt.rt 1 1 0 J0t)444,e. 2 0 0 Burius,c 2 0 0 Phillipa,an 1 0 1 Conlerrine•.3h 2 1 1 Giirsky,lf 2 0 0 Kernpner.lb 2 0 0 RotThaver,lb 2 1 I) Howard,c 2 0 1 Durbin.o 0 0 0 Ern rv,p 2 4) 1 Total). La rbyette Yvan state 13 2 5 •totals 16 3 4 .010 01-2 3 5 002 1:1-5 4 1 RBI— Phillips, Robinson. Contarinu. E— LI' 11 le, Moyer, Burns 2, Krrnpner, Rrnd hin. 2113—Pas. Robinron. SR-- Delo() nsr, Sae. DeLumg, Durbin 2. Sae. Fly-- Phillips. I.OP--Larayette 2; Penn State a. Herbert Defeats Venturi In Sudden Death Playoff HOUSTON RI Jay Hebert sank an eight-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a sudden death playoff yesterday to defeat Ken Venturi for the $7,000 top money in the $40,000 Houston Golf Clas sic. The scheduled 18-hole playoff had moved onto the nineteenth hole after Venturi picked up three strokes on the last four holes to match Hebert's 69, one under par for the 7, 122-yard Memorial Park course. Now. in addition to the standard black tux. we have the newest spring formal fashion The CONTINEN TAL tux, as seen in Gentleman's Quarterly. The CON TINENTAL features a white jacket and black contin ental vest. BLACK TUX complete 10-piece outfit, $7,50 pus ax THE CONTINENTAL 11 pieces, $8.25 plus lax FREE PARKING at Rear of Store While You Shop • 229 S. Allen St. • AD 8-1241 * * * ED KIKLA * * * ,Rodenhaver on a grounder to short and forced Kikla to sky out to center. Then Brodkin lined a single over short and went to third as Robinson followed suit. Brodkin continued ho m e when Taylor threw the ball away trying to catch Robinson rounding first. Nursing a 4-3 lead, Kikla bore , down and added to his strikeout total. He whiffed eight Terps dur ing his seven-hit effort. Gursky and Kikla produced ani insurance tally in the top of the! ninth. The big Nittany leftfielder left off with a single and moved to second on Rod,enhaver's sac rifice. Kikla scored him with a 11lac Sez Only 10 days left until Sen ior Ball! If you haven't made arrangements for formal wear, don't wait another day. Make sure that you get a complete tux that fits, in time for the big weekend. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA • ' , • , , . , HE WHO HESITATES IS LOST I On the Center of Pennsylvania' blast that seemed to clear the wall in left center. However, the umpire ruled it bounced over and Kikla was held to a ground rule double. The two-run margin proved more than enough as Kikia set the Terps down without a hit in the ninth. The Nittanies travel to West Virginia for the second part of their three-game jaunt Wednes day afternoon. • Box Score PENN STATE MARYLAND Ab R H - Ab R prodkin,26 5 2 2 Trust,s4 4 0 1 Robinson,36 4 0 1 Taylor.2b 3` 1- 1 Pae,ef 8 0 2 T.Brown,cf 3 0 0 DeLong,rf 4 0 0 D.Brown,lb 4 1 1 Jonasx 4 0 1 Klinedinst,rt 4 1 2 PhillipsAs 3 1 0 Rogers,e 4 0 0 Gursky.lf 4 2 2 Bowie,lf • 3 0 0 Itod'haver,lb 3 0 2 a-darts 0. 0 0 4 0 1 b-E4hon 0 0 0 Smith,3b 4 0 1 Turncr,p 3 0 1 t-Kupper I 0 0 Totals 94 6 11 Totals a—Walked for Bowie in 9th b—Ran for Marts in 9th e—Cooper flied out for Turner in 9th r h • Penn State _OOO 001 301-5 11 0 Maryland 000 003 000-3 7 K.—Taylor, 11111—Curaky 2; Pat; Kikia; Klinedinat 3. Pitching ip h r er eo bb Kikla (W. (2-0) 9 7 8 8 8 3 Turner (L, 0-1) 11 6 4 4 2 BIKE REPAIRS PARTS ACCESSORIES Western Auto 200 W. College Ave. AD 7-7992 HABERDASHERY Thinclads Beat Navy-. hind Moorhead with a time of ,4:14.6. The Lion sophomore ran a 4:24 at the Quantico Relays in his only other mile attempt. The Penn State frosh lost to Navy, 97 1 / 2 -37 1 / 2 , at Annapolis, Md., Saturday. George Barnhill captured two firsts for State in the 120 high thurdles and 220 low hurdles. (Continued from page nine) with a four yard lead. Brown was the only double winner of the meet, tying Art Pollard's meet record in both the 100 and 220. Brown beat Navy's Pete Goiwas in both events, win ning the 100 In 9.6 and the 220 in 20.8. Steve Moorhead set a new meet record in the mile as State swept to a one-two-three finish. Moor head's time of 4:12.2 erased the old mark of 4:19 held jointly by Horace Ashenfelter (1951), Ed Moran (1959), and Dick Engel ;brink (1959). Howie Deardorff was right be- A ROBE BY ANY OTHER NAME 34 $ 7 As Commencement Day draws near, the question on everyone's lips is: "How did the different disciplines come to be marked by academic robes with hoods of different colors?" Everybody— but everybody—is asking it. I mean I haven't been able to walk ten feet on any campus in America without somebody grabs ray elbow and says, "How did the different disciplines come to be marked by academic robes with hoods of different colors, hey?" This, I must say, is not the wand question asked by collegians who grab my elbow. Usually they say, "Hey, Shorty, got a Marlboro?" And this is right and proper. After all, are they not collegians, and, therefore, the nation's leaders in intelligence and discernment? And do not intelligence and discernment de mand the tastiest in lobaceo flavor and smoking pleasure? And does not Marlboro deliver a flavor that is uniquely mellow, a selectrate filter that is easy drawing, a pack that is soft, a box that is hard? You know itl But I digress. Back to the colored hoods of academic robes. A doctor of philosophy wears blue, a doctor of medicine wears green, a master of arts wears white, a doctor of humanities wears crimson, a master of library science wears lemon yellow. Why? Why, for example, should a master of library science wear lemon yellow? Well sir, to answer this vexing question, we must go back to March 29, 1844. On that date the first public library in the United States was established by Ulric Sigafoos. All of Mr. Sigafoos's neighbors were of eourse wildly grateful—all, that is, except Wrex Todhunter. Mr. Todhunter had hated Mr. Sigafoos since 1822 when both men had wooed the beauteous Melanie tatt and Melanie had chosen Mr. Sigafoos because she was mad fot dancing and Mr. Sigafoos knew all the latest eteps,•like the Missouri Compromise Mambo, the Shay's Rebellion Schottische, and the James K. Polk Polka, while Mr. Todhunter, alas, could not dance at all owing to a wound he had received at the Battle of New Orleans. (He was struck by a falling praline.) Consumed with jealousy at the success 'of Mr. Sigafoos's library, Mr. Todhunter resolved to open a competing library. This he did, but he lured not a single patron away from Mr. Sigafoos. "What has Mr. Sigafoos got that I haven't got?" Mr. Todhunter kept asking himself, and finally the answer came to bim: books. So Mr. Todhunter stocked his library with lota of dandy books and soon he was doing more business than his hated rival. But Mr. Sigafoos struck back. To regain his clientele, he began serving tea free of charge at his library every afternoon. There upon, Mr. Todhunter, not to be outdone, began serving tea with sugar. Thereupon, Mr. Sigafoos began serving tea with sugar and cream. Thereupon, Mr. Todhunter began serving tea with sugar and cream and lemon. This, of course, clinched the victory for Mr. Todhunter be cause he had the only lemon tree in town—in fact, in the entire state of North Dakota—and since that day lemon yellow has of course been the color on the academic robes of library science, (Incidentally, the defeated Mr. Sigafoos packed up his library and moved to California where, alas, he failed once more. There were, to be sure, plenty of lemons to serve with his tea, but, alas, there was no cream because the cow was not introduced to California until 1931 by John Wayne.) 47 I'M Mai SMitasua And today Californians, happy among their Guernseys and Holsteins, are discovering a great new cigarette—the un filtered, king-size Philip Morris Commander—and so are Americans in all fifty states. Welcome aboard! Reed Gets Big 10 Post CHICAGO (in Bill Reed, As sistant Big Ten athletic commis sioner since 1951, yesterday was named by the conference's presi dents to replace the retiring K. L. (Tug) :Wilson as commissioner. iiss of "1 Was a Teen-age Duvrf," " Ths Many Loves of Dade Gillis, ete.) * * * TUESDAY. APRIL 25. 1961
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