SATURDAY. MARCH 5. 1960 Weiss Cunningham Holds Firsts In 2 Ev Special to Co PHILADELPHI —Greg Weis,s, P. sensational sopho nast, took a comm in the all-around night in the Eas collegiate Gymna' tournament at So Philadelphia. The crew-cut We ss scored a 456 for the five even s run off to night to take the lead over Spring field College's Jeff C rdinelli who scored 446.75 point . Only the free exercise event remains to be run off tomorrow night. The Nittanies' senior co-cap tains, Lee Cunningham and Jay Werner are in third and fourth place. respectively, with scores of 411.75 and 409.25 after the first night's competition. Cardinelli must outscore Weiss by at least 9 25 points in the free exercise tomorrow night if he hopes to steal the coveted all around title from the flashy Lion soph. Cunningham, defending Eastern high bar champ, took the lead in, two other events. He scored a 94.5 in his specialty to lead teammates Weiss and Werner, and racked up a similar 94.5 total to lead the side horse. Weiss, last summer's Pan-Amer ican Games side horse champ, is in second place with a 90.5 total. The only other event in which a Penn Stater placed first was the long horse vault where Weiss tallied a 91.25. Although the consistent Weiss ATO, Phi Gam Reach IM Swim Quarter-Finals By 808 KILBORN Phi Gamma Delta and Alpha Tau Omega earned berths in the quarter-finals of the intra mural swimming tournament by eliminating their third round opponents last night. Phi Gamma Delta beat Phi Kappa Theta, 22-18, and ATO eliminated Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 30-10. Phi Kappa Theta started off in high style against Phi Gam as Walt Benecki breezed to victory in the freestyle in 33.8 seconds and in the backstroke with a time of 43.8 seconds, both the best times of the night in those events. At that point, however, Phi Gam swept firsts in the breast stroke, diving and the 120-yard relay to win the meet. ATO took first places-in every event to down SAE. ATO's Ken Coles and Bill Surg ner, who traded firsts in the freestyle in their first two meets, engaged in a nip and tuck bat tle, with Coles edging his team mate by less than a foot for the win in 36 seconds. Dick McCoy FROM FRIENDSHIP TO.MARRIAGE Fireside Forum Series "Combining College and Marriage" Mr. and Mrs. R. Lester Anderson Graduate Students in Physics and Math _ • at the WESLEY FOUNDATION 256 E. College Ave. Sunday, March 6 6:30 P.M. Leads EIGL 01110 011 14, #0 1 . 44 4 St. 4t eg. Ars 11). nts 1 egian , March 4 nn State's ore gym riding lead event last ~ .~ ern- Inter tic _ League th Hall in only scored one first place in the five events in the all-around, he carded three seconds and one third place to take the lead. In the flying rings, the expected duel between Army's Jon Aaron sohn, Werner and Pitt's John Hirst materialized as they paced the field in that order. Aaronsohn, defending Eastern champ in this event scored a 96, highest total of the night, to lead national ring champ Werner, who had a 93.5. The Lions' brilliant sopho more, Jerry Schaefer. suffered a major break and scored an 82.5, which was good enough only for ninth place—one place short of qualifying him for to night's finals. Lion senior Dave Palmer con tinued his late-season improve ment when he scored an 86.5 in the side horse for a temporary fourth place. Penn State's lone tumbler, Ber- of ATO again took the backstroke, coming from behind in a time of 45 seconds to beat Chuck Stender of SAE. Carl Tongberg won the breast stroke for the third straight time in 38.6 seconds, beating his nearest opponent by over half the length of the pool. Bill Pinder of ATO topped all divers of the night, piling up 24.4 points to win his third straight diving event. In the third meet of the night, Phi Kappa Sigma decisioned Del ta Sigma Phi, 24-16, for its second win of the season. Phi Kappa Sigma won first places in every event but the breaststroke. Basketball Scores NBA Philadelphia 136. New York 124 (et) COLLEGE Brown 90, Harvard 70 Wake Forest '7l, North Carolina State 6G Kentucky Wesleyan 108, J. C. Smith SO Pennsylvania 58, Cornell 47 Boston College 77, Syracuse TO Princeton 90, Columbia 59 Dartmouth 83, Yale 65 ACC TOURNAMENT Duke 71, North Carolina 66 NCAA First Round Abeline Christian 109, Colorado College THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Greg Weiss * * * * * * ...• . : o.' • • •• ••••• • • Lee Cunningham * * * nie Buhl, failed to qualify for the finals as Navy's John Marshall topped the tumblers with a score of 90. The horizontal bar proved to be the Lion's strongest event as it has all season. Cunningham, Weiss and Werner placed first, second and third, respectively. Nelson Hulme of Navy, the EIGL record holder in the rope climb, was timed in 3.6 seconds to hold the lead over Penn State's Vince Neuhauser and Bob Mu mau, who were timed in 3.7 and 3.8. For the six regular events, to night's finals will decide the champions on the combined-scores system, whereby the scores from the prelims and finals are added to determine a winner. BODIES IN MOTION 219:220 Advanced Pursuit of Females Professor Stalk Time & Motion Study. Study of time required to set dates in motion, (1) with ordinary hair tonics, (2) with 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic. Con clusive proof that latter more effective on men's hair and women's reactions. Special emphasis on common use of water on hair. Evaporation of same with dire consequences noted. Proof that 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic does not evaporate but replaces oil that water re moves. Laboratory, specimen: H. Ragmop, be• fore and after 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic. Before, a walking hayloft. After,B.M.O.C. This course specially suited to Bachelors of Science, Bach• elors of Art, and just plain bachelors. Materials: one 4 oz. bottle Taseline'Hair Tonic (full) one little black book (empty) A wa =roun d Big 'o', West Top AP Poll NEW YORK o'i—A new col lege basketball star will emerge! next season, in the wake of the' graduation of Oscar Robertson; and Jerry West. And the selec- ; tion of the 1960 collegiate bask-; etball All-America by The Asso-', elated Press yesterday indicates' Darrell Imhoff, the 6-10 senior the successor to the "Big 0" and ,who led California to its first the "Cabin Creek Comet" will be:NCAA title in 1959 and who wilt Jerry Lucas of Ohio State. help defend the crown in this Robertson, 6-5, of Cmcinnati, , year's tourney, also was named and West, 6-3, of West Virginia,ion the first team along with Tony were far ahead in the voting by:Jackk:on, junior star of the defend -329 sports writers and broadcast-ling National Invitation champs, ers throughout the nation. Their St. John's of New York - - - skill and finesse is well known, Stith topped the second team and it was no surprise that theyiselection composed also of Terry repeated from 1959. In fact, this isiDi se hi nger o f P ur d ue , R oger Kat the third straight year Robertson ser of Georgia Tech. Chet Walker made the All-America. of Bradley and Len Wilkens of Lucas, 6-8, sophomore who 'Providence LUTHERAN STUDENT SERVICES Grace Lutheran Church—College and Atherton Sunday 8:30, 9:45, and 10:45 a.m. Lutheran Student Center-412 West College Avenue Sunday 5:30 p.m.—Dinner meeting 6:30 p.m.—LSA—Pastor Dave Vikner, former campus pastor in China Grace Church March 7,8, 9 8 p.m.—Mission Pastor Ed Korte, formerly of Penn State campus Get your 'VASELINE' hair tonic at REA & DERICK 221 SOUTH ALLEN STREET PAGE SEVEN sparked Ohio State to its first Big Ten title in more than a dec ade, polled 253 first place votes to 311 for Robertson and 304 for West. This showing points to him as next year's individual standout. ??~ - ~J it's clear, it's clean, it's Vaseline® HAIR TONIC latasks' is a rodstarell tragasuuk if tiuntituei•Peod's In.