PAGE SIX Rain Costs Bergey Starting Assianment - & ; Wr By .JOHN iMOSreiS Right about now Dave Eer gey must be-wondering if he ; is ever going to get a chance .to pitch again. The senior righthander, who ; has had one of the most frustra- ] ting seasons imaginable so far this [ year,” had his debut as a starting t pitcher put off again yesterday when the Lions were rained out of. their game against Lafayette. Bergey was somewhat of a sen sat ionas a sophomore and a steady hurler for Joe.Bedenkfs team last year. His talents were being count ed on heavily for the 1962 season BUT THEN TATE stepped Bergey developed a case of su diabetes, forcing him to miss Lions’ early practices aod th first several games Bergey is almost ready to now. but a combination of thi. has delayed his first start. He . mentioned as a possible starter in Tuesday’s game against Maryland, DICK ANDERSON but .the Nitlany coaching staff k k k gave the'nod to lefthander Bob : into Tuesday's came Fenton in order to keep at least f . <B * 1 a'hitler one pitcher in a regular rotation ' p thcre » £ edenk has say . .. it was the rain andK B u K p r ; n g “One of these days it will be. Fentons turn to Pitch h j f break loose ” against Navy Saturday bn Beaver g*. . j „,idenk hopes it is just a preview of bfo hf« S ' th > n gs to come. Anderson hit a HnHni. C **h» IS lwo * run triple and stole home in i rnfii e nf n ß| , .rfc S ne» f nhJei the first innin g, then delivered a! dayifago rout of ® uc * tne * l nlne game-winning single in the bot ttoe 1 KB' l tied him ; with contest gave the Nittaniw n op fielder Dick Pae and third portunity to reflect on their nar- . p . T ; P h» for team row 6-S over M.ryl.dd. '£™ h " ip F "? £f l de^r iS ONE OF THE brightest aspects' with'ifeven. He leads the team in of the sloppily-played game was'home runs with two. j the clutch hitting of Dick Ander-i Left ■ fielder Roger Kochman] son. Bedenk considers Anderson aialso had a good day at the plate "picture hitter,” hut the big right.against the Terps, boostin| his fielder had been having his prdb*. average'to .285 with two hits in lems at the plate, batting only .231 four trips. Managerial Changes Rumored NEW YORK (AP) The base- doing badly, winning 10 of their ball season is less than a month first 19 games. -old but already there are rum-; A usually reliable source said 'Wings of impending managerial!that Casev Stengel already has changes. 1 informed George Weiss, the presi ' ~ . . - dent of the New Yorjt Mets, to According -to the grapevine start ] oo kj nc f or a prospective . (whatever that is), two big league f or 1963 Casey an _ managers are on shaky ground nounce his retirement again im v/bile two others have decided to jlnedijltel at ind of the 1962 pass the job on to others at theL^j^ end of the current campaign. j prom Boston it’s imported that The uneasiest of all 20 major;Mike Higgins, the • popular Red league pilots today must beiSox manager, has,decided to take Mickey Vernon, the soft-spoken off his uhiform at the expiration . gentleman who runs the Washing-jof this season and move into the ton Senators. The alarmists would]club’s. front office.: Higgins’ logi have you believe that only a 2-lical successor appears to be John victory over the Boston Red Soxiny Pesky, the former Red Sox Tuesday night saved Mickey's job.'shortstop, who returned this year THE SAME SKEPTICS insist!^^ that Minnesota Manager Sam'? managers fri 1961 Mele, like his predecessor Cookie League managers in 1961 Lavagetto a year ago. is feeling the hot breath on club owner Calvin Griffith on the back of his neck. Mele supposedly has been told the Twins must make a re spectable bid for a first division finish —. or else. The Twins,-re covering from a slow start, aren’t ★ ★ ★ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA Relay Show f Law of Averages Pleases Lion Stops Golfers Skein Trock Coach i By JOE GRATA The 5-4 defeat Penn State’s golf team suffered at the hands of West Virginia Tuesday afternoon was inevitable. The proverbial “law of averages” finally cai ght up with the Lions, figuratively stole 'the tee from; under them, and left State licking its wounds after being stopped atop a five game winning)skein. . | ’ ■ j Since the first'meeting with the Mountaineers in 1940 until now, the Nittany luiksmen have played havoc against Of course, the reason is simple.,West Virginia,'!, winning (seven; : 1 : c Penn State did not place first in ! m atches while losing none. But-while teammates Swahn and Rol a single race or event in the two!,. ' and Gartner copped in the second days the meet was held on Frank-; lhe ta,e waS dlfferent thl * foursome, 3 and 2. , lin Field. The metropolitan.head-dn; the Country Club; Dave Liebau j and Paul Hummer lines told of the conquests of the at Mor gantown, W. Va. 0 f the Lions uere both defeated ,winners Villanova, Michigan,! It was a hot and sultry day j n the final foursome and lost the New York University, and Abilene with temperatures ranging :in the "best ball” malch. Both were iied Christian in the coveted Cham-middle 80’s. Ther ‘-Jl *ith their Mountaineer opponents pionship of America relays. .course was new | until the finalihole, a rough 615- "If Penn State had won the coach i*!; 1 yard par five. I four-mile relay and we almost V 1 "We thought we'd get the win did. we were leading right up’ Wn'cn incluaea there,” Boyle said, "because both until near the end there would/°H. r *°Phomores.^7^ ! «s||^M boys t off ; good drives down have been much more n 1-1£ V the middle of I the fairway while tion for us,” coach Chick Werner e £ « - t-.. West Virginia sliced their drives said after the meet. "But as it;??*f‘ rous to 016 ‘ t [- '<•§•-» into the woods. Not to alibi, but was, we didn’t do so badly.” . thp Mountain- ‘ " i ' it was lucky t)iat they were able The Lions didn’t win any re- I**,-,. 1 **,-,. WPr p non- ’ll c ' ear shots out of the woods lays, but they placed in seven! s j dered weaker Wt-l and towards the green." events out of the 11 that they than usual, at 1 LIEBAU AND Hummer had ‘entered, a good showing first, but the J— B ** h iputting troubles however, and ing the, hlinareas of athletes West Virginia contingent took aitumed in bogey sixes while’their entered m the fabulous meet. [quick lead. Soon, all- tne Penn (Mountaineer competitors parred j “There were three or four teams-State golfers were down, except.the hole to glvfe West Virginia the that dominated the relay races, captain Bob Swahn. . { jdecisiye margin and the team’s but after that Penn State was in “Swahn shot a magnificent parjonly Ict o ry against State good shape,!’ Werner said. "You 36 on the front nine,” Boyle said throughout the years don’t have to win against teams [yesterday: "He jset the pace by like that to be considered good.(turning in -The j largest winning There were a lot of good teams'margin of the day (6 and 5), even there that didn't even place.” [though he was [penalized several Assistant coach Norm Gordon (strokes on the 10th hole when his [was in agreement .-with WemerJball was lost injti pile of leaves." "Some teams had men'entered >nj SOPHOMORE Jim Tabor was almost every event, but didn dither Lion to turn in; a vic place m any, Gordon said. jtoryi in match iplay.j Tabpr was “A lot of people'probably think (three holes behind [his' opponent we rhade a poor showing because until the final few holes, when he we didn’t win. But I think we surged ahead with a fine array 1 !did real welL” ’ lof shots to down Jim Goodwin, j Starting this Saturday the Lioni2-up. Both Tabor and Swahn pre i thinclads get into a three dual I served their marks at 6-0 by win ■ meet homestand by entertaining ning.. , i 'Michigan State on Beaver Field. The other two points for the ■Pitt and. the Quantico Marines Nittanies came in “best ball" will be State’s other foes on the play.’ Tabor and Bill Robinson ;two following weekends. in the first foursome, 2-up, Track fans who read the! accounts of last weekend’s: \ Penn Relays in the Philadel-j pbia or other metropolitan papers, saw very little about the success Penn State 'gained in that meet. By DENNIS KNICHT THURSDAY. MAY 3. 1962 Mays' Bth Homer Leads Giants Over Bucs, 3-2 i SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Willie Mays hammered hb eighth home run yesterday,} powering the San Francisco Giants to a 3-2 victory over, Pittsburgh. It was the I,Gi ants’! eighth straight triumph [and theirMongest winning streak since coming west, in 1958. } Righthander} Juan" Marichal weathered Bob Skinner’s two} run homer in the first inning to be come the sixth consecutive start er to go the route for the Na tional League leading Giantsi.He won his'fourth game against two setbacks.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers