sus' Torn Wright wrestles with tennis By GLENN SHEELEY ANsisinnt Sports Editor -SllOll athletes ane 1101h1r0.' 1101 t for the POllO State 1 . 01.7r:011 Tholo area 0011ther of cjo, the cpenri time n eking up a s t v t , si that they :ertelv,iy con- Ile, Hall their campus address. nv tike Dave Joymni isn't in for too much of a hen he iurns in his it re,iliniy i toes ;or a foothill] Ailhouch the I\',o spin ts iiffer diffrient qualities, ral idea tc still to eOOlllO our opponent to come a fairly decent impression of a dead fish by the scotehoand rtllls , out. oynor . :t totutitmit the physical part of the swltch spot lc still motty much the , ame •tluattun for combinatton netter-exapp!er Tom s a hale motto tacky. 01.2 h Wr11:111 t< not 1.11.2 ..f coach Bill Kull's var stlers, Its s ill} spends plenty or limn nn the mat. e tennis leant a•semblei, to eel Its Pll-IC crwa. Wllthl finds himself in trouble betote he inches his fits; sett e ose my touch for tennis herall.;e m. 111LKOICS ip from wrestling. • ' Wrlght , aid. "1 \ttesllo a little Ilan a lot of prople and n ucualh• lakes me about .eks 10 get bark m shape... ectl Inc and I Cll7ll , are tWC , hllli.'S hich in,t fl(111 . t Ihcr vet y wed," coach I lottnec Cathra II added. lts von !nicht hax e to play a 5- , et match. Refry'? The Sisters of (HI OMEGA welcome their new l i i initiates LINDA DOBRIN BARBARA FIEHLER jl MAGGIE GRAHAM I I VICKI GREENE CHRIS HARRIS JUDY VACCARO JUDY WINDSOR he Old Same Place 311 W. Beaver (next to Centre Film Lab) store for your living environment ! —Complete line of water beds & accessories —Air couches, chairs, tables —Best prices for candles (all sizes & shapes) —Chinese paper light fixtures —Hammocks—cotton & rope —Bedspreads, wall hangings —Ha_ndicrafted pottery A shop for all people Our prices have YOU in mind. Spring Fling Sale Starts Thursday, May 20 The term is soon coming to an end. Summer vacation will soon be here. To usher in the new season Hur's is offering these great 0 to 50% off On All SUITS and SPORT COATS and OUTERWEAR ' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SHIRTS . • KNITS V Special Group 1 / 3 off • • 7.50 198 • 8.00 6.38 • 9.00 7.18 • •••••••••••••••••••••0000•00 All Flares Reduced ! All Long & Short Sleeve Were NOW Closed today to get ready Hur's Men's Shop Open Daily 9 - 5:30 238-7926 Hur's announces its 114 E. College Ave. THE. DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA you know it. it's 3 p.m. and you are still playing. "Endur ance is the big thing as compared to wrestling wheae you blow everything in eight minutes. In tennis the player has to conserve himself for the rest of the match." Tom might have broken into Koll's wrestling lineup this year had he not run into Dana Balum. Don Stone and Bar ry Snyder. One consolation for Wright was a victory he ca pt ure d at Navy's plebe tournament. "As a freshman I didn't know hbw to handle the train ing for both sports," he said. "I stopped running in the morning and it really messed up my wrestling season. Coach Koll could never figure• out why I was never in shape. This year I stopped practicing tennis and started running again during wrestling season." Wright sports a 10-2 individual record on a Cathrall squad that has seen more wins (II) than any Penn State tennis team in the last 60 years. Cathrall considers Tom as having one of the better serves on the team. 'My serve is pretty good when I get it in,' said Wright. "I'd say the strongest part of my game is the passing shot where you hit past the opponent near the net. "The weakest part of my game is volleying at the net." he said. "I hurt my shoulder wrestling this year and that gives me problems sometimes on my serve and overhand shots." Toni fails to run into any !Tat problems holding down a pair of sports at Penn State. In fact, he even says it helps him budget time all that much better. The only problem he might run into would be if he tries to break a tied set with a takedown. Sorry, Wright. Wrong sport. Canonero 11 for sale Horse's trainer sad BALTIMORE (AP) Train er Juan Arias would he heart broken if he and Canonero 11, the horse who has made him famous, were to part company. 'it would be like getting married. — the 22-year-old Ven ezuelan bachelor said, "and then having your wife go away from you." But with a Florida syndicate reported ready to offer $4 mil lion for the winner of the Ken tucky Derby and Preakness, arias knov,s a split may be near. Pedro Baptista, who races the 3-year-old colt in the name of his son-in-law, Edgar Cal belt, is scheduled to go to Miami tomorrow to discuss the bid. "I'll be broken clown if he is sold." Arias said as Canoncro II was walked , around the Pimlicon course for his first exercise since winning Preak ness last Saturday, Arias, speaking through an interpreter, Dr. Jose Almenar, a close friend and business as sociate of Baptista and Calbett, said when asked if losing Cano- nero II would be worse than losing a personal friend! "It would be worse than that. It's life." Arias, a trainer for 12 years, said he loved all horses be cause he gets them as year lings an ' ti ey "become like my children " "But this horse has made me travel in another world. He has made me famous." Arias fully realizes that the decision to sell is not his. how ever. "He's the owner," the trainer said of Baptista. "I'm the pro fessional man training the best I can. I hope he gets the best price he can." Arias said Canonero II is "so much within me." that he would be inclined to go with the 1 horse should the new owners seek his services, rea m The top syndication mark is held by Nijinskv, whose value was placed at $5.4 million last By JIM DEZART ity on Sunday. It was marked fall. In 1966, Kauai King was by hard-nosed performances by Sports Writer syndicated at $2.16 million after Collegiantwo of the best milers the winning the Preakness and be- PHILADELPHIA The world has ever seen. fore losing the Belmont. "Dream Mile" became a real- Marty Liguori refused to be ---- I ooc0; overtaken by the famous Jim 0 ; Ryun kick. As a result he hung g! on to win by a step in the 0; fastest mile ever run on the o' ! East Coast. Both runners were ; o I timed in 3:54.6. O ' "I was lucky," the Villanova o; o senior said after the race. "I °1 think he just got caught a 0 ,1 little short in this race. It's 01 early in the season. In the next ~, six weeks he'll do a lot of o speed work. He should be a dif g, ferent runner the last 220 yards O then he was today." ... . . • .. ---------- --- 0000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000 :0 The newly chartered gamma chapter of Beta Rho Delta (woman's engineering sorority) proudly announces its first initiates Jackie Scheuren Jan Talbot Ann Perry Kay Herman Peggy Draper 0 0 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 i Applications Are Available for the College of Business Administration STUDENT ADVISOR PROGRAM in 120 Boucke laa 1111 itzt WEI 'PRI Pal l'ol 1 0 41 Pei left lta PZI t . NI Nat PA Rx OA, PPA git 0 ff i i^. ---** i (tit li 'AO Stjp , Al. 1: ) e FLY .... NAVY NAVAL AVIATION OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM WILL BE IN ROOM 8, GRANGE Tues. May 18, Wed. May 19, Thurs. May 20 9 aim to 4 p.m. If you are going to be something, why not be something special? If you demand something exciting and challenging, consider the opportunities available as a Navy pilot, flight officer or air intelligence officer, consider world wide travel and the invaluable experience gained through Naval Aviation. : Offering a Commission in the Navy as: J._ • Navy Pilot . ,;i: • Naval Flight Officer Ask about a ride in the T-34 aircraft. V , 1.4 .44 *4 tit *i 19, 4 alll ITt la% Wei Its rea !lax otn Women's liberation: An athletic comedy By TERRY NAU Collegian Sports Editor Now that women's liberation is imminent, sports writers throughout the county are lean ing over their typ6vriters, dreaming up new cliches with which to fill their sports pages once girls invade the last bastion of male supremacy. After consultation among the fouler-minded sports writers at The Daily Collegian, a list of clean jokes about women jocks (sic) was compiled. Betty Fried an: look out! Football jokes: "There would be more holding penalties," said former sports editor. Dan Dono van, a well-known male suprem ist. "I guess there would -be a Jot of piling on too," he added. "And the quarterbacks would never be able to make up their minds in the huddle. There would be plenty of audibles called at the line of scrimmage." Another pundit decided the huddles would turn into gossip sessions and delay of the game would become a frequent. call by the officials. Female running backs would be well-known for their hip fakes. Football coaches would talk about "an upcoming crop of sophomorettes." Female defen sive ends would never tackle the cute guys on the other team. The number 69 would be banned. Each girl would make certain her uniform wasn't the same mile' a nightmare • Air Intelligence Officer • Information on other officer programs style as that of her teammates. Instead of awarding a Heisman trophy at the end of the season, the Friedan Cup would be issued. The locker rooms would have shower stalls and each male player would be issued a set' of blinkers. Inquiring sports writers would never take notes in the locker room. "The closest girl to the gridiron should always be the cheerleader" an eminent male chauvinist Baseball would also undergo some radical changes. Thdre would be no such thing as a bull pen. Cowpen might be more like it. The girls would sit around and.knit while waiting their turn at bat. They would frown upon tobacco chewing in the dugout by male players. Infield flies would he few and far between on an all-girls team. Instead of letting the umpire dust the plate, the girls would wash it. Television closeups would test the makeup compact of any female player. Periodi cally, each team would be short of female players. In golf, because girls need an energy pickup, they would carry Ryun who just finished his first tough race since he quit track two years ago, said he was "encouraged" by his per formance. "It was only a year and two days ago that I begun running again so that's not too bad progress. Naturally I would have been more pleased if it was me in front at the tape. It was such a great and fast race that I can't be un happy." During the first lap Joe Savage, an 18-year-old Man hattan freshman, set the pace while Ryun and Liguori stayed in the rear of the pack. The time for the first quarter was • • The .: COPPER KITCHEN For • , SANDWICHES Italian Hoagie Sausage and Meat Ball • Veal Steak Parmesan Plus more! 114 S. Garner more irons in their bag. Bag is another term that would be banned from use. Golf scores would take on a new meaning for galleryites. In basketball, personal fouls would abound. Instead of push ing off Underneath. players would ,nudge each other. Foul shooting , would be eliminated. The hook shot could only be taken by hookers. Tennis players would find out what love really means. Newspaper headlines, could never say "Lions score" without hinting at a double meaning. Sports writers wouldn't he able to say a team charged out onto the field. Pranced would he more like it. A girl was never tackled in the midsection, she was brought down with a girdle snapping grab. Pitchers never paused to wipe the sweat from their brow--they took a powder break. A hurler never got,sent to the showers— . she headed for the ladies room. Obviously, the puns and dotible meanings could 'go on and on. Fortunately, for the reader, the time has arrived to end this non sense. Women, however, draw a deeper meaning from this column. If they enter men's collegiate sports competition, they may fall prey to some poor punsters. Maybe it would he best to let the situation stand as it is. The closest girl to a gridiron should always be the cheerleader. for Jim Ryun a slow 60 seconds Ryun then moved past Liguori on the backstretch and shot into second beh',id West Virginia's' Morgan Mosser on the far turn. At the'same time Liguori was following. Ryun all the way as he moved up to third place. The time for the half mile was an even slower 2:03. After the first.' turn Liguori made his move as he shot past Ryun. "We knew he had to carry his kick over 500 to 600 yards to knock that speed Ryun has," said Liguori's coach, Jumbo Jim Elliot. "We wanted to go out with 500 yards left. But when the pace got slow we had to take him out with 600 yards to go. I knew after the first slow half he had to move then. Marty knew it, too," he added. Ryun followedtiquori's move and suddenly there v.ore only two runners in the race as all the other milers fell far be hind, With the crowd literally go ing wild, the two runners came into the final lap with less than two yards separating them. Each time Ryun would move a The Pledges of Alpha Chi Sigma wish to thank the brothers for one helluva P-FORMAL GR K LEATHER JEWELRY - (in the People's Nation) Completely New Selection of Belts Suede Moccasins $7.95 - 8.95 HATS Cowboy, Gaucho, Straw Floppy Felt & Suede Leather Jean Jacket $39.95 (5 Colors) New Sandals $4.50 &up WEDNESDAY,' MAY 19. 1971 little closer Liguori would dig in a little harder. Coming down the stretch it appeared as if Ryun would catch the Villanovan but Liguori broke the tape just ahead of the world's record holder. "At the middle of the curve Ryun was coming." said Bob Timmins, Ryun's coach at Kansas. "It looked like he would make it at the break of the turn. But Marty picked it up and held on to it. "I think this time it was under fair circumstances for both of us," Liguori said after noting that his previous two victories over Ryun were con sidered "tainted" by most track fans. "I was glad it took place in the East and generated so much excitement.' he added. Now Liguori can claim his title as "best miler" and not have to worry about those who said he couldn't beat a deter mined Ryun. Now he only has to worry about facing Ryun again. The brash Liguori probably won't 1% orry too much about that.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers