PAGE SIX Ash6ifeltei Lion Cross-Country Star Beats Fred Wilt in 10,000 Meter Run The cream of the nation's distance runners including two of the FBl's best, Fred Wilt and Horace Ashenfelter, failed to catch Bill Ashenfelter as the lanky Nittany senior scored the greatest triumph of his career by winning the National Senior AAU 10,000 meter cross-country championship Sunday in Philadelphia. Mitten, earmuff and warm-up clad Ashenfelter fought off 15- degree cold, a biting wind and the doggedness of FBI Flyer Wilt to win by a foot with a driving finish over the last 10 yards. Both were timed, in 30:26 for the ap proximately 6 1 / 4 mile course. Beats Brother Ash's stunning . upset victory in the Fairmount Park frigid endur ance test was his first major tri umph in a championship meet after three years of outstanding distance running for Chick Wer ner's track teams. The closest Bill had previously come to winning a "big one" was in the 1950 IC4A cross-country run when he took runnerup hon ors behind Army's Dick Shea. Aside from defeating Wilt, NCAA X-country champion in 1941 and well-know for his re peated failures to beat the U.S. mile king Don Gehrmann in doors last winter, Bill licked bro ther Horace, another former Penn State distance star Curt Stone, and defending champion in the AAU run, Browning Ross. Olympic Contender Horace, NCAA. two mile track champion in 1949, was third, clocked in 30:09, and Curt Stone, Olympic 10,000 meter participant and U. S. track champion was fourth in 30:41. Ross ran a poor fifth. By triumphing over such elite company, Bill establishes himself as a contender for an Olympic berth next summer after his grad uation in February. Penn State's position as a home of distance running champions was evidenced by the fact that four of the first seven finishers were present or former Lions. Herm Goffberg, ex-State X-coun try runner, -took seventh to be the fourth Nittany finisher. Goff berg ran for the United States during the '4B Olympics. Lindner 15th Bill Ash represented Penn AC, coached by former Lion runner Jack St. Clair's father, but de spite his victory Wilt's New York AC won the team title by 29-35 count over the Philadelphians. Stan Lindner, another, member of the Lion harriers the last two seasons, took a creditable 15th place running for Mutual of Omaha. Long-striding Bill moved into the lead after 50 yards. From that point on he and Wilt ran closb together until the dash for the tape where Bill with a burst of reserve won the National Ama teur ,title. Olympic Year Introduces New College Mat Rules Because of the forthcoming Olympic games, some major rule changes will be introduced in the coming wrestling campaign. The first and most important rule change will be the stressing of take-downs. This season wrest lers will be stressing take-downs as the most important part of the scoring system, since it is an Olympic year and Olympic and AAU rules do the same. A wrestler' will be allowed to take an opponent down, and then let him up purposely. Last year if a competitor purposely gave a man an escape, he was penalized. Another important change is that a man on the offense will, be allowed to ride the legs only for the purpose of preventing an es cape or reverse. Once the offensive man assumes control, he must work up on other parts of the body. Last season there was a lot of controversy as to whether a man has escaped or reversed before he was off the mat. This year referees have been instructed to call a "break," and bring the wrestlers back to the center as soon as any point of any wreslter's body touches the apron. Previously, a • • . . •, „ , THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATECMYJEGE. - - PENNSYLVANIA: • ' TtrEHDAY''.DECTIVIItEN-litr'l9l Bill Ashent4lter Named Week's Top Athlete For hi's brilliant performance in winning the Senior NAAU 10,000 meter run Sunday, Bill Ashenfelter wins the Athlete of the Week award. It is the second time that the Lion cross-country star has been selected by the Col legian sports staff as the week's top athlete. In turning back some of the nation's top distance runers, Ash enfelter ran the six and one-quar ter miles in a time of 30:26 to edge out FBI agent Fred Wilt, Horace Ashenfelter, and Brown ing Ross. By winning the NAAV Bill marks himself as a definite contender fOr the 1952 Olympic team. The win for the last of the Ashenfelter brothers is a bril liant climax to an outstanding college career. Last season when Penn State won the NCAA cross-country ti tle, Ashenfelter led the Lions to victory by placing eighth. This season he placed fourth as the Lions took third place. In the IC4A meet last season, he placed second, and this year he finished sixth. break was called when one of the wrestlers' shoulder touched the line. There has also been some spec ulation in intercollegiate circles about two more weight classes in the EIWA and the NCAA cham pionships in preparation for "the Olympics. These two weight classes would be 115-pounds and 191-pounds. Although it is almost definite that these weights will be approved for the NCAA, noth ing is definite for the Eastern championships or dual meets. American TKO'd NOTTINGHAM, England, Dec. 17—(R)—Alex Buxt6n, British middleweight, today gained a three-round technical knockout over Burl Charity of Youngstown, 0., when'the American was forced to retire with a cut over his left eye. The bout was scheduled for eight rounds. Buxton weighed 159 3 / 4 ; Charity 158%. Gene Wettstone, Penn State coach, directed the United States gymnastic team in the 1948 Olympic Games. Wini''-'',..s:,NAAU Road .. Tilt . l -.l7llourit.:''Ljetii*'; Lose to Wyoming. End Top Receiver In Nation New York, Dec. 17—M—Dewey McConnell of Wyoming, a 6-foot, 186-pound senior end, won the maj or college Pass catching championship for 1951 with 47 catches in 10 games. McConnell, whose defensive play wos so good he was named to the defensive platoon of the Associated Press All-American team, gave the Skyline area its second successive receiving title holder. Gordon Cooper of Den ver won it last year ;but finished 33rd this season. . Close to Record It took a strong finish by. Mc- Connell, who grabbed NY passes in his last three games, to nose out Ed Barker of Washington State and Jim David of Colorado A. & M. Barker — and David each caught 46, one more than Karl Kluckhohn of Colgate and Fred Snyder of Loyola of California. McConnell was close to the all time record of 52 set by Barney Poole of Mississippi in 1947 and tied by North Carolina's Art Wei ner in '49. The only other pass catcher in college history to•bet ter McConnell's mark was Henry Stanton with' 50 for Arizona in 1941. Barker broke one record by stretching his 46 catches into 864 yards, bettering Stanton's old rec ord of 820 yards set . l.o years ago. Nine Touchdowns Bill Howton, a Rice senior, averaged 22.6 yards per catch, the best by far among the leaders. He took care of 75 per cent of Rice's aerial gains with 747 yards on 33 catches. Rice completed only 62 passes for 1,014 yards all season. Jay Grumbling of Virginia Mili tary and Barker shared laurels by scoring nine touchdowns each on passes. On the basis • of catches per game, Kluckhorn and Snyder ac tually did better than the leaders for they nabbed 45 in nine games. Wes Bomm of . Columbia, also caught them at a five-a-game clip with 40 in an eight-game schedule. Spartans' Win OVer Irish 'Big Surprise' NEW YORK,. Dec. 17-07 . ) What was the biggest surprise of the 1951 collegiate football sea son? If you listen to the gents who covered the big garnes—the na tion's sports , writers and broad casters—they'll tell you there were two outstanding surprises: 1. The ease and power with which Michigan State butchered Notre Dame, 35 to 0, and 2. Stanford's brilliant showing in winning nine straight games for the Pacific Coast Conference title and a bid to the• Rose Bowl. There were many other sur prises during the turbulent sea son just ended, but these two ranked far ahead of all others. In fact, in an Associated Press poll of 103 writers and broad casters, the Michigan State-Notre Dame game and Stanford's show ing each received 17 votes.— Following these was Princeton turning in its second straight ‘in defeated season after losing Most of• its varsity.. Six voters picked this as the top surprise.. But, of course, the Tigers didn't lose-All. America Dick Kazmaier, and he's a one-man team himself. Jesse Arnelle, 6-foot-5 New Ro chelle, N.Y., athlete, is.rated Penn. State's best. frosh prospect in years. W ' and '.J, ..,..i,..:9146. With 14 more road games staring him in the face, Coach'Elmer Gross isn't too pleased for . his Lion basketball team has failed to prove itself .a travelling' team. Saturday night a supposedly underdog Washington and Jeffer son team ran - its home winning streak to 19 as it defeated the, pre- viously unbeaten . Lions, 49-46. !cores 17 Jesse Arnelle Steel Tourney Calls Cagers Over Vacation Penn State's cagers have fin ished their regular season games until Jan. 5 when they meet Col gate in Rec Hall, but the Lions will play two tournament games in the Steel Bowl tourney in Pittsburgh, Dec. 27-28. Other teams entered in the first tournament in the newly-com pleted Ptit fieldhouse are Michi gan, Pitt, and Virginia. Pitt Favorite State will carry a 2-1 record into the classic. The Lions de feated Ithaca, 51-21, Bucknell, 73-63, but lost to W&J, 49-46. Coach Elmer GrOss - believes Pitt will be the favorite in the tournament. The Panthers opened with an upset 65-64 win over Columbia, which had previously won 32 regular-season contests. Bernie Artman, a Panther soph omore substitute, stole the ball and dribbled in to score the win ning basket with less than 40 seconds to play. Tall Team Clarence Burch, a sophomore from Oil City, was the outstand ing player for the Panthers, al though Don Virostek led Pitt in scoring with 16 points. Pitt has a mixture of veterans and newcomers this season, and a team taller than most of Coach Doc Carison's squads. Virostek (6-4) is the tallest, but Art Boyd (6-3) and Mickey . Zernich (6-3) give rebounding support. Captain John Kendrick stands six feet one inch, and Burch- and Scott Phillips, both sophomores, are six-feet. • NCAA Will Form TV Policy in Jan. CHICAGO, Dec. 'l7--(iP)—Tb:e full television committee of - the National Collegiate. Athletic,Asgo elation today ended a "progress report" meeting, but said the 1952 football video policy will not be determined until the NCAA con vention at Cincinnati, Jan; 10-12. Co-chairman Ralph Furey of Columbia University said the group yesterday and today re viewed operational developments of the NCAA's experimental, con trolled grid television' program last- season. ' "We won't bp able to make any recommendations until we study a preliminary report on a survey By DAVE COLTON &J hasn't been beaten at home since State did the trick 51-50 in 1949. Big freshman center Jesse Ar nelle (6-5) continued his rapid improvement, and led the Lions with 17 points. Bane Weber was the -top scorer of the game as he tallied 18 markers for W&J. Tough Season ~ .x~,...,. - ~ The win was the Presidents' second of the season against three losses. The Nittanies now have a 2-1 chart. The only other contest the Lions have played away was • a practice tilt with St. Francis. Gross' cagers also lost that. one. BOk. Penn State Fa. F P Sledzik 2 2 6 Makarewicz '0 • 0 0 McMahan 0 1 1 Williams 1 4 Piorkowski 1 2 4 Sherry 3 2 8 Arnelle 6 5 17 Haag 2 0 4 Weld'ham'er 1 0 2 Penn State 'W&J With five-eighths of the 24 'game schedule away from Rec Hall, it could be a long, tough season for the Lions. Arnelle's 17 points gave him the three game leadership • in team scoring with 31 points. He r Sledzik is second with 25, while Joe Piorkowski an d freshman Jack Sherry follow with 24 points each. Despite a height advantage against the Prexies, the Lion cag ers didn't control the backboards. Gross said "they outfought, out rebounded, and outshot us." Two of the Blue and White starters only scored one point be tween them. Whitey: Makarewicz continued in his slump as he fail ed to score, while Co-captain Jay McMahan made only a foul. The Presidents played without the services of one regular and only limited service by another starter. Ed McGlumphy, wh o sparked the team in its first win over Eastern New Mexico was injured in practice, and didn't dress for the contest. Joe Rich ards, the leading scoring threat, didn't play much because of an attack of influenza. Cut Lead W&J jumped off to a 12-6 mar gin in the first quarter which the Lions . were never able to over come. Both teams tallied 12 points in the second quarter and the Presidents led 24-18 at halftime. State cut the home team's lead with a 16-13 edge in "the third period, but the Prexies fought off a last-minute rally to win by three. The Nittanies trailed by only one point with a minute to go, but couldn't crack the Prexies' man-to-man defense. Mantle Will Marry MIAMI, Okla., Dec. 17L-(1P) New York Yankee baseball play er Mickey Montle oncl his high school sweetheart, Merlyn John son, ogtained a marriage license today. Members of their families de clined to say when or where the couple would marry. ' • by the National Opinion Research Center which we expect around Jan. 1," Furey said. The survey, costing $50,000, ex tended through six channels, in cluding polling of 270 colleges on the affect of television on their home game attendance. "As to what the NCAA will do about television next year, I can't say," Furey said. "Our commit tee's job was to investigate the television picture. The.. NCAA. membership will make the final decision." itie CORE W & J PG F P Weber 7 4 18 lifoizer '5 5 15. Krebs 0 2 2 Alvarez 0 2 2 Chan . 3 0 6 Oblate 0 1 1. 'Richards 1 0 2 Taker 1 .0 2 Sonson ' 0 1, 1 6 12 16 .12-46 12 12 13 12-49 Regulars Missing