. . Cindermen break six records at Pitt By DAVE DUNLOP .• Collegian Sports Writer Charlie Maguire collected one of five Penn State firsts : 6 4 : Saturday as he ran his impressive unbeaten string to six victories in six meets by winning the three-mile at the Pitt Invitational Track Classic. •:•:• Also grabbing firsts for the Lions were Ken Andrews in the javelin, Al Jackson in the shot put, Fred Singleton in the 120-yard high hurdles and the 440 relay team of Doug Finkel, Singleton, Mike Sands and Jimmy Scott. Twelve Pitt Stadium and meet records were cracked by the 34 teams on hand and Penn Staters had a hand in six of t : f: them. The eight Lions who picked up firsts were also awarded wrist watches. Olympic gold medalist Dave Wottle of Bowling Green *3 also won a watch when he set a Pitt Stadium record in *: winning the half-mile in 1:50.2. Wottle also anchored his school's mile-relay team but was unable to overcome a large deficit as Pitt won the K: event by 20 yards. Maguire, who has won a race in every Penn State meet this spring, beat off a determined drive late in the race by teammate Gary Gittings to win at the wire. Both runners x• :were clocked in 13:38.4, a meet and stadium record, but Maguire broke the tape ahead of Gittings. The pair burst away from the rest of the field with a half-mile to go and ran virtually side-by-side the rest of the way. Maguire edged to a slim three-yard lead, Git tings caught him with a half lap remaining but was outkicked on the home stretch. "Both boys wanted the watch," coach Harry Groves X remarked, possibly referring to when Gittings and teammate Ken Wilson crossed the finish line smiling and shaking hands in a dead tie to win the two-mile versus Kent State earlier this year. Maguire and Gittings both belted out the final quarter ::: E:E mile of Saturday's race in 59.2 seconds. Singleton took the 120-yard high hurdles in a Pitt „.. .••• Stadium and meet record 13.9 seconds. His time also • established a new school record in a race Mike Shine's 14.4 timing netted fourth. The 440 relay triumph also snapped meet and stadium 0 marks in a time of 40.8 seconds. The team had broken those records Friday in the trial heats and broke them again the ,next day. Jackson's shot put win came on a toss of 50' 1 1 / 4 " while in the javelin, Andrews paced a Lion sweep with his fling of 227' 8". Tom Stevenson took second (222' 2") and Joe Feerrar was third (214' 3"). In other Penn State developments, Sands set a meet and stadium record for the 220 Friday at 21.2 seconds but : slipped to 21.4 seconds in the semi-finals. He and Finkel each ran 21.8 seconds in the final race to tie for fourth. Major League Standings American League East W. L. Pct. G.B Milwaukee 14 14 .500 Baltimore 14 16 .467 New York 14 16 .467 Boston 13 15 .464 Detroit 14 17 .452 Cleveland 14 18 .438 West Chicago 18 8 .692 Kan City 20 12 .625 Oakland 17 14 .548 California 15 13 .536 Minnesota 12 14 .462 Texas 9 17 .346 Results New York 4, Baltimore 0, Ist Baltimore 9, New York 6, 2nd Milwaukee 6. Detroit 5, 10 innings Boston 8, Cleveland 3 Minnesota 5, Kansas City 0 California 3, Chicago 0 Oakland at Texas, N National League East W. L Chicago 20 13 New York 17 14 Montreal 13 15 PIRATES 12 14 PHILLIES 11 19 St. Louis 8 22 West San Fran 25 12 Houston 22 12 Cincinnati 19 13 Los Ang 19 15 Atlanta 12 19 San Diego 12 22 IResults Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2, Ist 1 3'2 4 6 9 Chicago 9, Philadelphia 3, 2nd San Diego 6, Atlanta 4, Ist Atlanta 6, San Diego 2, 2nd New York 6, Pittsburgh 4 St. Louis 3, Montreal 2 Cincinnati 2, Houston 0 Los Angeles 15, San Francisco 3 Lion nine blasts Buffalo in DH sweep By STEVE REITZEL Collegian Sports Writer After playing three games in three days, a weary Buffalo nine crawled into State College at 1 a.m. yesterday for an afternoon doubleheader against Penn State. Twelve hours later, the Nittany Lions wore the visitors down some more, pounding out 22 hits, scoring 23 runs and sweeping the two games 17-0, 6-0. Buffalo could sense it was in for a long afternoon from the start. The Lions reached four Buffalo pitchers for eight hits, seven walks and 15 runs in a first inning rally that took nearly an hour. While a laugher from the start, the contest did showcase the pitching of John Maier, who raised his record to 5-0. Maier struck out four and gave up only two hits in a four-inning stint cut short by Lion coach Chuck Medlar, who is saving Maier for a probable start in Wed nesday's doubleheader at Indiana (Pa.) Maier said he was con cerned about his long layoff between the first and second frames, but felt the overabundance of runs helped his pitching in the long run. "You always worry a little GAME ONE Penn State ab r h bi Vogel 2b, ss 4 2 2 1 DeWitt cf 4 2 2 1 Micsky ss 3 3 3 1 Stine 3b 4 2 2 1 Sherkel if 3 2 2 4 Burke rf 3 1 1 1 Ochs lb 3 2 2 1 Coval c 3 2 1 1 Maier p 1 1 0 0 Koch c 1 0 0 0 Barfek p 2 0 0 0 Warchal ph, ss 0 0 0 0 Masella ph if 1 0 0 0 Kramer cf 0 0 0 0 Baney c 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 17 15 11 Totals 23 0 3 0 Penn State E Magliazzo, Mario, Lalayanis, Vogel. LOB PS 10, BUF 6. DP Ochs; Magliazzo, Lalayanis, Scime. 28 DeWitt, Burke, Micsky. SB Piscotty, Sherkel. SAC Burke SF Burke. Niewczyk (L, 4-3) Kobel Alt Lasky Maier (W, 5.0) Bartek Pet. G.B. 606 548 2 464 4 1 / 2 462 4' 2 367 7 1 / 2 .267 10i Netwoman tops pregnant foe An Ohio State women's tennis player eight months pregnant provided the highlight of the women's weekend sports scene. Carol Kovaleski, the reigning Ohio state cham pion, played despite her condition and lost to Penn State number one singles player Carol Backenstose and her team lost to the Nittany Lions 4-1. 647 1/2 594 3 / 2 559 4 1 2 387 10 353 11/Z It was the first loss of the year for Kovaleski, who was allowed to play only after two physicians gave their ap proval. czyColLe r gp s The Daily Collegian bit," Maier said after the game. "I threw a little bit in the bullpen and was all right _ when I went back in. "When you're up 15 runs there's a lot less pressure. "You can relax and just throw the ball." Len Bartek came in to clean up, and didn't allow a hit the rest of the way to gain a save in his first mound ap pearance. He also picked up a save in the nightcap, coming in to fan one batter for the final out of the afternoon. The Lions also received fine pitching in the second contest. Mitch Lukevics went five innings, giving up only four hits and walking one to pick up his fifth win in six starts. He ran into trouble only once, filling the bases in the fourth on two walks and a single. Lukevics managed to strike out the side and shrugged off the inning with a comment Buffalo ab r h bi 30 0 0 Songin if Lalayanrs P,scotty Cf Magliazzo 2 Stanko rf Scime lb Marzo 3b Cox c Niewczyk p Kobel p Atti p Lasky p Mary c Montour 3b Zodora ph Gorman ph 000 00 . 0 0 1501 10 . 0 x R ER BB SO 7 7 2 0 5 4 2 0 3 0 3 0 2 1 3 4 00 1 4 00 3 6 IP I-I 1-3 5 0 3 13 0 513 7 4 2 3 1 So nuclear energy may solve the current energy crisis and leave everything rosey red, huh? Maybe not. Do your own thinking. See what the current Focus offers for your nuclear-knowledge fund Get Focus'on sale Wednesday at stands and in the HUB. 35' ChardStrauss:Also sprach Zarathstra 1.111• 3 Orchestra • mllism StrAWI 'The 'perfect' opera may never get the perfect recording, but in the here and now it's difficult to imagine a more provocative, musically distinguished 'Carmen' than this." -- Peter G. Davis, THE NEW YORK TIMES, April 22, 1973 59 PLUS! The Entire DG/ARCHIVE catalog ats 698 0 \ LIST PER DISC 4 .: i sco un t recor O 2530160 Monday, May 14, 1973-9 that plate umpire Gus Stiner was "not giving me the knees." Penn State's hitting still shared the spotlight. The Lions kept up the barrage in the nightcap as leading batter Dennie DeWitt stroked a double and triple, Greg Vogel lined two doubles and Lukevics helped his own cause with a two-bagger. "The fellows are hustling, they are scrapping," Medlar said after the sweep. "They went out there today and really took charge." But while Medlar praised his team's overall per formance, he would not admit to the probability of a playoff berth that should be nearly assured with State's present 15-4 season mark. "We're not in the playoffs yet," he said. "We have to do well the next three ball games." GAME TWO Penn State ab r h bi Vogel 2b 3 2 3 1 DeW,tt cf 4 0 3 3 Micsky ss 4 0 0 0 Stine 3b 2 0 0 0 Sherkel lf 2 1 0 0 Burke rf 3 0 1 0 Ochs lb 1 1 0 0 Coval c 2 1 0 0 Lukevics p 2 1 1 2 Correll p 0 0 0 0 Masella ph, p 1 0 0 0 Bartek p 0 0 0 0 Totals 24 6 8 6 Buffaloooo 000 0 0 . Penn State - 040 101 x 6 LOB PS 6, BUF 8. 28 Vogel (2), Lukevics, DeWitt 3B DeWitt. SB IP H R ER BB 50 22-3 4 4 4 5 1 11-3 2 1 1 0 1 2 2 1 'IO 1 540 0 1 8 100 0 0 0 2.3 1 0 0 2 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Buszka (L, 0-1) Riedel Klym LukeviCS (W. 5 1) Correll Masella Bartek YMPHONY ~^ mow: Mon - Fri 10-9, Sat. 10-6 127 S. Allen St., State College 237-5876 ab r h bi Songin lb 3 0 1 0 Lalayanis ss 3 0 0 0 Piscotty cf 3 0 1 0 Magliazzo 2b 3 0 1 0 Stank° rf 3 0 1 0 Zadora if 3 0 0 0 Sc,me c 2 0 1 0 Marzo 3b, ss 3 0 0 0 auszka p 1 0 0 0 Riedel p 0 0 0 0 Montour ph, 3b 1 0 Saf ran ph 1 0 0 Totals 26 0 Vogel - ffra, jp. l_ll) f ~' , , j. $1 ‘....,), , John Maier goes Buffalo hunting and nails his fifth win ENJOY A GRAND PRIX IN STATE COLLEGE The Penn State Grand Prix Association in vites you to its 3rd Annual Grand Prix on Saturday, May 19th. At 11:30, a parade will wind through State College and campus, ending at Parking Lot 80, across from East Halls, where a bicycle race will take place at 12:15. Following, there will be a skydiving exhibition, a ladies' tricycle relay race and the 100 mile go cart race. TRY RACING OUR WAY, SAT. MAY 19th ADMISSION IS FREE (rain date: Sunday, May 20th) 4010". 1 ilesanhe • Jrant rnvphtil '4 /he Re/ea 4e lite efriew Auhtenan S:ye6 Wall/Melt AIN* ekviene dleiendein, cam/tick/Iy. Varilyn Home James McCracken :n the, Metropoirtan Opera Productcn 01 eonard Bernstein q with Complete Libretto DG 2709 043 Carmen Georges Eicet .4141- c . "Das4rMAL, Photo by H.R. Begley II ONE WEEK ONLY! 1 a SP. r r,,,,,,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers