FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 30 U.S. 1 Decat MELBOURNE, F Milt Campbell and • race for the decathlon I field team entered th enough points to carry title in the unofficial poi The track and field America's workhorse cr, it comes to winning me points, thus far have col of the 19 Gold Medals w. U. S. in the 1956 games. track and field competitic to an end tomorrow. After that. America • to concentrate on the s its main source of poin Russia goes to work mastics. Going into today's eve the first swimming fina uled in the men's 100-m: style and women's • breaststroke—the U.S. hi to 219% edge over R points. The only track and fi today are in the decat women's shot put and sprint, and the U.S. is qualifier in the sprint. Campbell, the 1952 r nnerup, and Johnson, the worl. record holder, were in a clas all by themselves through e firs; half of the decathlon y sterday with Campbell winn . g three events and placing second in the Navy Defeat Killed Booter Title Hopes Penn State's soccer team's bid for a third straight na tional championship didn't materialize this year and the reason hinges directly to the United States Naval Academy's 2-1 win over the Lions two weeks ago. Navy's one point victory eliminated the Lions from con sideration for a playoff berth in' the Intercollegiate Soccer Associa-' tion's Eastern championship play off series, which gets under way this weekend. Four teams are included in the playoff. which is approved and recognized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Springfield College represents the New England states: City College, of New York repre sents New York state: West Chester Stale Teachers College represents the Middle Atlantic States: and the University of Maryland represents the South. Maryland, who the Nittany boot- 1 ers completely outplayed in win ning a 3-0 decision, defeated the Middies, 1-0, last week in a play off for the Southern berth. West Chester was given the nod over the Lions even though the two teams battled to a scoreless deadlock during the regular sea-- son. The Rams lost only one game and tied one while the Nit tanies dropped two and tied one. CCNY played one common opponent with the Lions. The New York school tied Army. 2-2. while Penn State walked to an easy 8-1 win over the Cadets. Final statistics released by_ the Lion soccer team show that the Lions out-scored their opponents by a 10-1 ratio. Coach Ken Hos terrpan's booters tallied 49 goals while limiting foes to nine. Six shutouts were recorded by the Lions including the 0-0 tie ominates lon Action L iday, Nov. 30 (/P)—Two young giants, ,•fer Johnson, climaxed the two-man old Medal today as the U.S. track and final phase of its assignment to build the Yank to another over-all Olympic t count. athletes, w when' als and ected 12 n by the And the n comes other two for a 4,564-point total. Johnson. a UCLA student. was second with 4,375. Going into the final five events —ll O-meter hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and 1,500-meter run —Campbell, from Plainfield, N.J. was running ahead of Johnson's pace when he set the record of 7,985 points. I t ; 1 have • ims as s while grm- The complete domination by the l American pair in . the decathlon and a 400-meter run victory by Charley Jenkins of Villanova were highlights of -yesterday's competi-i tion in cold, blustery weather. But' the big talk was reserved for the 3,000-meter steeplechase which provided the first rhubarb of the games. Britain's Chris Brasher—the "rabbit" who paced Roger Ban nister to his historic break through the 4-minute mile bar rier—first was adjudged the winner in record time, then was disqualified for "interference." The Olympic jury of honor final ly settled the case and awarded the decision to Brasher, who fin ished 15 feet ahead of the pack. is—with I sched ter free %oo-meter Ids a 318 j ssia in Id finals ton and 00-meter ithout a By LOU PRATO with West Chester—which was the only whitewash the Nittanies suffered. Both of the booters' losses were by one point, the Navy defeat and a 3-2 loss to Pennsylvania. Tommy Nute. Per Torgeson, and Mike Siollmeyer tied for season scoring honors with 13 each. Nute had the highest in dividual single game with five goals in the Army rout. Torge son's high was four against Syracuse and Stollmeyer's top single score was three against Catholic University. Dutch Walz, three; Jim Hed berg, three; Dave Haase, two; Steve Flamporis, one; and Ward Hill, one; round out the scoring. In shooting statistics, the Lions had 413 attempted boots and 46 corner kicks. Opponents, on - the other hand, registered 197 at tempted shots and 35 corner kicks. With a strong sophomore con tingent - on the present roster, Penn State looks for good cross country teams the next two Tears. Penn State wrestlers, for the second straight • year, finished a point behind Pitt last year in the Eastern championships. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Moore Choice Over Patterson In Title Bout CHICAGO, Nov. 29 (-I"}—The old - nan fights the former Olympic champion for the world's heavy weight title tomorrow night with Archie Moore,- 39, "going on 43," pitting his experience against 21- year-old Floyd Patterson for the crown vacated by Rocky Mar ciano' in April. Moore, who had his first pro fight in 1936 when Patterson was only a babe in arms, hopes to make the grade on the second try in this 15-round match. He was knocked out in nine rounds last September in Marciano's last fight. The odds on Moore have been flickering from 8 to 5 to 6 tO 5. A heavyweight title 'fight in doors at Chicago Stadium is a novelty in an age accustomed to summer baseball park presenta tions for this sort of a scrap. How ever, television explains that. The radio-TV sponsor has tossed in $200,000 for the rights to aim his microphones and cameras (NBC) at the ring at 10 p.m. (EST) with Chicago and a 150-mile sur rounding area blacked out on TV. International Boxing Club offi dais reported an advance sale of $175,000 when business opened to day. They indicate a gross gate of 5250,000 with 17,000 people pre sent. 2 Fraternities Top 'B' Bowling After seven weeks of bowling, Sigma Chi and Theta Chi are tied, for the team lead in the fra ternity B bowling league, scoring 24 points out of a possible 28. Three 3-1 decisions and three 4-0 shutouts highlighted play on Wednesday night. The league leaders,' Sigma Chi topped Alpha Chi Sigma, 4-0, and Theta Chi downed Triangle, 3-1. Delta Theta Sigma tripped Phi Kappa, 3-1; Alpha Sigma Phi de feated Kappa Sigma, 3-1; and shutouts were registered by Delta Chi over Phi Epsilon Pi and Phi Mu Delta over Alpha Epsilon Pi. Steve Flamporis, Penn State soccer captain, now of Reading, Pa., was born in Athens, Greece. fAI goa \0....,... ,......... ....... ... ...: . 4 ,„ ~... _:„,..:. THE TOWN HOUSE GIVES TO YOU Irs OWN • .;,• FORMULA. FOR FUN Jerry Miller Combo 4:30 to 6:00f T.G.I.F. 4 ~'l~. ~ f t,~.. f:tj~ ._ t.>:`. UP, NIC Name Valentine Lion football captain and guard He was also chosen as the only Sam Valentine was accorded ad- , Nittany lineman to participate its ditional honors yesterday whenlthe annual East-West Game. he was named to the All-Fra-I _ ternity All-America first team, • which is chosen by the sports i flave a WORLD of FLIIVI writers from all major wire serv-1 , t . ^' Pave/ with SiTAI ices for the National Interfrater-' . ; * nity Conference, and to the Unit ed Press second team. S") ' 4-aEuroPe These .are the fourth and fifth ) .. . teams Valentine. a member of ' ••• ._ 60 a.. ...=— F.." WS' Sigma Phi Epsilon, has been men-1 "- • 1 Ori 4 Vt i tioned on. Colliers Magazine, a , named him as one of the coun-i . !r, • 4165 Owls Z.... film ;998 try's top guards, and International' Winn Mon, Pews .. .d.4. 4., News Service and NEA feature: SEE ,•-• coi4 9 . 0.4..• syndicate named him to their sec-` Orekek Also low•coss hips Ito Monk* and team selections. 5169. up. South AnilOril<l. /16991•4 N Hatwaii Saudy Tows $.57111 .0..4 The 5-11, 205 senior was the' Aroutud the world 5139$ uch Lions' top defensive performer, throughout the season and was named four times to the Weekly: All-East team. Dancing Tonight 10 to 1 at the Paradise Cuba Bellefonte Music by The Don Smaltz Combo You will soon: The first one to already on the market: One minute it's a sofa. Then press a button and it unfolds into a bed—automatically. Press the button again and it folds back into a sofa: This is just one of many new ways Owl electricity will be working for you in the years to come. Electricity will heat your home in winter, cool it in summer . cook your food in seconds instead of hours . . open your garage doors at the approach of your car; You'll need plenty of power for this new electric age—and it will be waiting when you want it. Independent electric companies like this one build ahead of your needs so you will have plenty of electricity always! % ttR . • 4 ----------- WEST PENN POWER MI MIMI eCTINCO' PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers