TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. TOSS' > ‘ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. St ATE ; COLLEGI 'lone' May Marciano Is 3%-l Choice; Advance Safes Climbing By JACK HAND NEW YORK, Sept. 19 ( fP ) Hurricane lone, swirling north with a wallop that could flatten both Rocky Marciano and Archie Moore, threatened tomorrow night’s big heavy weight title bout at Yankee Stadium- Promoter Jim Norris, president of the International Box ing Club, kept an ear glued to the telephone for the latest re ports from his personal weather 'man who predicted a mid-morn ing clearing. Until lope decided to try to crash the gale, the ticket sale was booming with the advance approaching $BOO,OOO. A tre ' mendous last day sale was ex pected. Now it all depends on the weather. If the fight should be post poned, it would go on Wednesday night. With the Yankees on the road, Yankee Stadium is avail able the rest of the week. The odds favoring Marciano lengthened a bit to 3%-l as fight time approached. The book makers said it was 6-5 Moore wouldn’t go more Mhan eight rounds and 18-5 the bout wouldn’t last the 15-round route. Boxing writers who- have visited both camps were even more positive than the odds. Of 68 polled, it was a 64-4 land slide for Marciano, the heavy weight king who is unbeaten in his 48-boot career. The aver age pick was Rocky by a knockout over the lightheavy king in nine rounds. Marciano flew in from his training camp at Grossinger, N.Y., and was shuttled off to a hiding place until weigh-in time at noon tomorrow in the lobby of-Madi son Square Garden. "I am in the best condition of my life," Marciano said. "1 am going to win and by a knockout if it is humanly pos sible." Moore, the wandering minstrel, who gets a chance to become the oldest man ever to win the title at 38, flew from North Adams, Mass., his training base NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Brooklyn 95 63 .642 Milwaukee 83 66 .657 12% New York 76 72 .610 19% Philadelphia 75 74 .503 20% Cincinnati 73 77 .487 28 Chicago 70 78 .478 26 St. Louts 64 84 .482 81 Pittsburgh 68 89 .395 86% Games Today Pittsburgh at New York (21. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. Night. Milwaukee at Cincinnati. Night. Chicago at St. Louis. Night. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB New York 91 66 .619 Cleveland 90 59 .604 2 Chicago 87 €2 .584 5 Boston 82 65 .558 9 Detroit 75 73 .607 16% Kansas City 68 B 5 .426 28% Washington 51 95 .349 39% Baltimore 61 95 .849 89% Games Today Cleveland at Chicago. Night. Kansas City at Detroit. New York at Washington. Night. Baltimore at Boston (2). BusAd Council Mixer Slated for Waring Hall The College of Business Ad ministration Student Council will sponsor a freshman mixer at 7 £.m. tonight in Waring Hall ounge. Ossian R. MacKenzie, dean of the College of Business Admini stration, will attend the mixer. Council, and faculty members will also be present. Music and refreshments will be provided. Students may attend. Judicial fo Meet Tonight Women’s Judicial Board will meet at 6:30 tonight in 218 Hetzel Union. Your One-Stop Service Store Has TEXT BOOKS FREE BOOK COVERS You can get Everything you will need You Can Get It at Metzgers 111-115 S. Allen Street Baseball’s Big Leagues for all courses at Penn State METZGERS Whenever You Need Something . . . KO Archie, Rocky Phi Delta Theta Wins IM Crown; Sigma Nu 2d Phi Delta Theta proved to be the top fraternity in intramural competition last year according to final tabulations released by the IM department. The champions, recipient of The All-Year Point Award trophy, captured first place with a total of 842.2 points. Touch football, which the Phi Delts won—good for 155 points—and handball sin gles. where they finished second for . 135 points, were the two largest point producers for the victors. Sigma Nu, with 814 points, fin ished second. Sigma Nu won the golf team event and finished sec ond in boxing and basketball to net it 300 points. Beta Theta Pi wound up in third place with 657 points. The Betas won the swimming tourna ment, and had enough second and third place finishes to edge Delta Upsilon by one-half point for the third spot. D.U., runner-up in the wrest ling tournament, compiled a to tal of 656.5 points to finish fourth. Failure to score a point in either the golf-medal or horseshoes tournaments hurt the house’s’ chances of finishing higher. In fifth place with 653 points was Phi Kappa Sigma, victors in the boxing tourney. This, coupled with a second place finish in ten nis, earned the house 385 points. Theta Xi, 624 points. Delta Sig ma Phi, 602 points, Sigma Chi, 584 points, Alpha Sigma Phi, 577 points, and Delta Chi, 544 points, round out the top ten. Phi Delta Theta, winners in touch football and tennis dou bles, and Zeta Beta Tau, hand ball singles and doubles cham pions, werj the only two-time victors last year. Theta Xi won, the badminton event and finished second in volleyball while Delta Sigma Phi copped the runner-up position in both the football and I swimming toumies. and f. PENNSYLVANIA Outing Club Announces Three-fold 55 Schedule Membership soared last night for Penn State’s Outing Club as freshmen and upperclassmen alike turned out in force to the club’s first meeting where plans for the 1965 activity list were an nounced. The Club, which swelled to 500 members last year, has 16 offi cers and is divided into three main groups—field and stream, cabin and trail, and winter sports Each group has its own officers. James Bealer, president of the field and stream group, outlined that section’s coming activities which would include the annual canoeing trip to Canada next summer, archery events, fishing trips, and a turkey shoot. Sealer’s group will also have a rifle team. Joseph Phillips, president of the winter sports section, an nounced that his group will again sponsor a five-day skiing trip to Allegheny Park in New York. Phillips also said that three skiing parties will be held this winter. The dates of the weekend parties will be announced at a later date. An ice show and ice skating and skiing instructions will be added to this year’s pro gram, Phillips said. Albert Reeves, president of the cabin and trails section of the club, announced that a “leanto” —a slanted roof shelter with three sides—had been construct ed at Beaver Dam last year by his group. Plans for a similar project atop Mt. Nittany will be handled by Reeves’ group this year. In addition, the cabin and trails group plans to sponsor a joint outing and several overnight hikes this year. , The Outing Club is partially supported by money alloted to it from rpti-wi o n fees of students enrolled at the University. The auaitional finances, which are used for repairing and buying State College, Pa. equipment such as the ski tower, are paid by assessing each mem ber a $2 membership fee. Money for the cost of food and transportation' for the various trips is obtained on a “chip-in" basis. The highlight of the club’s summer activities was a ten-d y "' , noe trio from State CMlege to Brenton .Ontario. Despite several sov_,i-miie hikes, heavy wine’s, cold weather, rain, and rough water in addition to sleeping in a railroad depot someplace in On tario, the group seemed to enjoy themselves. Anybody for the Outing Club?? Training Program Registration Open Students may register for the proposed eight-week leadership training program today and to morrow at the Hetzel Union desk. The program will consist of eight 90-minute sessions which, will begin Wednesday, Sept. 28. A meeting place for students enrolling in the program has yet to be chosen, according to James Musser, administrator of the pro gram. All students who received in vitations to enroll in the program may also register at the Hetzel Union desk. Registration began yesterday. Entries for IM Tennis Due by September 23 Entries for the intramural ten nis single tourney must be turn, ed into the IM office, Recreation Hall, not later than 4:30 p.m. Fri. day, September 23. An organization may enter only two men. Independent students may enter as unattached individ. ' uals. PAGE SEVEN
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