TI.TESr. ) 4 I r, S'AT'TATIT 8 t M? May Formulate New College 'Sanity Code NCAA CINCINNATI, Jan. 7—(W)—The National Collegiate Ath letic Association, under fire for its inability to curb excesses in college athletics; will try to formulate A. new "sanity code" this week to replace the . one which was junked a year ago Working in close harmony with one group which has ' criticized the NCAA sharply, the commit tee of college presidents repre senting the National Council on Education, the NCAA council will offer legislation which, if accep ted, will give the organization board regulatory •powers. General Principles "We will. have a sanity„ i but implementation and enforce ment will be left to the member institutions and conferences," said Hugh 'C. Willett, NCAA president, in outlining the proposed legisla tion at a news conference today. "It will be largely a statement of general principles and we are confident that the various con ferences will set up detailed reg ulations. For instance, one amend ment call s for observance of sound academic standards. It isn't possible to establish nation-wide rules specifying certain standards because conditions vary so greatly in different places. But each in stitution or conference can es tablish its own rules. Committee Will Report "We think we have p o tent means of enforcement brewing," Willett added. Willett also revealed that Pres ident John Hannah of Michigan State, chairman of the presidents' committee, and Dr. Arthur, Ad ams, NCE president and ex-offi cio member of the committee, will attend a joint meeting of the NCAA council and executive committee Thursday to report km their efforts to solve. the prob lems of athletics. , Sheldon Otis of Wayne University will give a report for the National Student Association at the same meeting. Wrestling— (Cohtinue from page six) downs to lead 6-2 in the third period, but an attempted reverse misfired and Comly pushed fling worth into a near fall. Lynn es caped and took Comly down sec onds before the final buzzer. In his first Nittany mat appear ance frosh Bob Homan bested Tom Tooker 4-0 in the 123 pound bracket: In the second period Ho man reversed- Tooker and in creased his win margin with four minutes of 'advantage time. Larry Fornicola, State 137 pound freshman, put up a tremen dous struggle to prevent three third period pinning attempts by Ken Faust and managed to hold on for a 2-2 draw. - In being the 'only loser, 5-4, Doug Frey wrestled well but ,met a rugged foe in Ed Mahoney. New Mat Coach One of Penn State's all-time greats, Charley Ridenour, is the new wrestling coach at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. Riden our, a veteran, competed prior to World War 11. use the New MICRO7O.4fIC —the Absolutely Uniform DRAWING PENCIL .Absolute uniformity means drawings without "weak spots"—clean, legible detail. Famous for - smooth. long-wearing leads. Easily distin guished by bull's-eye degree stamping on 3, sides of pencil. At your campus store! EB E RHARD......... ..' 1 .... .FABER 8 ,. E. R ... . . TRAY[ iARki ... U.S. PAT. on 'p*T S TATE Pr,Ns.r.avANTA EE!MEM Kansas Again Tops Nation's Cage Teams NEW YORK, Jan. 7—(2)—For the second straight week, unbeat en Kansas tops the nation's col lege basketball teams in the AS sociated. Press poll of sports writers and sportscasters. Settling down to its - regular schedule after winning the Big Seven-tournament over the holi days, Kansas thumped Oklahoma for its 11th consecutive victory. Kansas drew 38 firsts on the 102 ballots that produced a shuf fling but xi° upheaval in the first ten places. Illinois, racing past Minnesota to make its record 8.0, clung to second place with 21 firsts. In point score, based on ten for first, nine for second and so on, Kansas led Illinois, 812 to 774. Kentucky climbed a peg to third place on wins over Missis sippi and Louisiana State, annex ing 12 .firsts. Indiana's victors- over Michigan for its Bth in a row earned four t h place for the Hoosiers. St. Louis bettered its position, moving up two notches on wins over Houston and La Salle while Washington, which split a week end series with Idaho, tumbled from third to sixth. Kansas State, St. Bonaventure, Seton Hall and lowa - all strength ened their positions among the top 10. St. John's dropped from eighth to 12th and New York Uni versity, beaten by West Virginia, 100-75, fell fro,m sixth to 13th. Olympic Test Penn State for the second time will be the site of the National AAU - Olympic gymnastic cham pionships, April 25 and 26: LEVINE BROS.. SALE • Pre-inventory Now Going On. Only Seven Days Left To Take Advan tage Of These Money-Saving Offers. We're Closing Out Our Entire (17 7 . 17..,\ Stock Of .;:. -------- ',' ? --"\\ ::': ; \ !i.: JAYSON SHIRTS \ v...//c -- -': ‘,..: ~. ,„ I Round, Roll, 'Spread and But- V , ‘ •• .., Is c,..) \ A -. i ton Down Collars In Whites :... 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Stay Close The Crusaders had a tougher time in keeping their slate un blemished as they won over the the Pythons, 18-12. The winners led,. however, by a 13-2 margin at halftime and had to stall the Pythons' second half effort. The Sea Hawks stayed just one game behind the Epars by tak ing a forfeit victory over the Radads. Joseph Beere tallied 12 points to lead the Blues to a 31- 13 triumph over the Mustangs. In the final game of League A, the Fireballs racked up their third win by defeating the•Puddy Cats, 24-7. Paul` Klempay led the win ners with 10 markers. Dorm 35 Unbeaten In Leauge B action, the Bears .and the Cats fought a battle for second place, one game behind league-leading Crusadei's, and the Bears came out on top by a nar row 22-19 margin, Dorm 26 used a margin in the first half to edge the Beaver House, 15-14. Dorm 26 had an 11-5--lead at the half. Marilyn Hall won its second game by outlasting Dorm 30 in another close game, 23-17. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers