FKIDAY. APRIL 22 Olymp Will B Nine' Penn Sta Bill Oberly are ine 1 II Olympics Wrest in Rec Hall. Varsity matmen Tony Scordo, Artie Ravitz, Ron Pifer, College Boxer Buried 1 John Trojan, anc Johnston “Big O" Oberly head the! MERRICK, N.Y. (.Ri —Services Penn State contmger t. f ■ ——.were held yesterday for Charles Scordo wrestled 12 5 for Charlie bantamweight class. I Mohr, 22-vear-old University of u! h! \ Z °!: koff , iS a doub ‘' Wisconsin' boxer who died'last' is moving up to tne 1 .atneiweight tul starter in the tourney. An of a ura.n i division (136.5) for :he Olympic eastern champ. Zolikoff recently f n a national collegiate fight tndK. imjutea his back and may have* rru ,»» , , The Oberly brothers, Bill and ho drop out of the featherweight The son of Mr ' and Mrs - Charles Johnsion, will both compete in 'division. ‘ i Mollr Sr ‘ of Merrick was hurt the unlimited division, "Big "O" , Larry Tenpas, former NCAA ® m defending his 1959 was the Eastern champ and took champ from Illinois, i s entered in NCAA championship a third in the nationals this year. ; the welterweight class. .against Stu Bartell of San Jose Brother Bill is a former national i The tournament is a round- State ‘ heavyweight champ. irolun meet with seeding.? deter-' ~7 7.7,'“, Flashy soph Ron Pifer is entered mined by the luck of the draw. Gndders Will Pley 9 in the welterweight (160.5) divi-jMatches are 12 minutes long, di- Penn State will play onlv nine sion Long-legged Ron captured.vided into 4 periods: 6-2-2-2. football games in 1960 as opposed thiid at 157 in the easterns and Final places are determined to 10-game schedules m 1958 and a fourth in the nationals. by the number of penalty points ! 1959. An open date is sandwiched Ravitz wrestled at 130 much of; amassed by each wrestler. If a [between the Sept. 17 Boston Um the year but is moving up to the; man is pinned, he is charged versity opener and an Oct. 1 date lightweight (147.5) division I with four points. A loser by de- Iwith Missouri. Trojan, who wrestled at 191 this! cision is penalized three points | state wiH return to a 10-game winter, wrll probably enter the and a draw counts two points ! sch edule in 3961, and is slated for nU< rtJv| We division. I against sach_ wrestler, A winner no-game cards through 1964. Other Penn Slate entrants are ! by decision is charged with one j A 1 Feingold. flyweight; Hay point. . | Penn State baseball coach Joe Nunamaker, bantamweight Ev ! Six penalty points eliminate a'Redenk owns a record of 382 vic- Barber and Tom Canty, feather- .wrestler. The two men with .the tone s, 142 defeats and six ties weights, and Paul Slegner. wel- 'least number of penalty nmnty terweighl. jmove on to the final Olympic! Elliot Simons leads the impres- trials at Ames, lowa, next week.ll sive list of competitors in the fly-' Another preliminary round will;! weight division. Simon is an'be held tonight at 8 with the NCAA and two-time NAIA cham- semi-finals set for tomorrow at] pi on. Pitt captain Larry Lauchle, 2 followed by the finals at B.il runner-up in the easterns this, Plenty of tickets are still avail winter, is the man to beat in the'able for all sessions > v yfcBltL "SM "Q Father, you didn't know that the CENTRE COUNTY FILM LAB is giving a FREE enlarge- ment this month?" Old dad’s a dolt, except at tuition time ... but even so, he should know that the CENTRE COUNTY FILM LAB is offering the big FREE enlargement special again. To get your enlargement, all you have to do is take a roll of black & white film to the FILM LAB or any FILM LAB DEALER, and get it developed. When you get your pictures back, you’ll get a coupon entitling you to a 5x7-inch enlargement of any nega tive you choose . . . FREE! No gimmicks, no tricks, no politics ... we just like to keep our printers busy. That 18-hour day bores them unless we keep ’em slav ing over a hot printer . ... now's your chance to get a FREE enlagement, and keep from falling into the apathetic rut that old pop’s in. ’ 321 W. HEAVES AVE A Dams 7-4805 ADaros 8-1531 ic Mat T ryouts ! ~^X“ / | BOSTON f.T>) Ted Williams. I 'II 9 S 1 Boston’s slugging outfielder, and elgg afl 1 \ f Yogi Berra, New York catcher, ■ H 1 9 jf jsat out yesteiday’s Red Sox-Yan- By JOHN MORRIS * l kee k aseba h S anle because of mi te wrestlers and former State mat great^ nor ailments. b j Williams was idle to rest the uded m the list of entrants for the District groin nmscle he pulled Tuesday, itlg Trials which start at 2 this afternoon Berra was sidelined by a stomach THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE ailment jknkrk everything’s easy tn j seamless stockings Sally Darnes Looks at PUERTO RICO STUDY STYLE Full of tales and tans manv lucky Penn Staters returned to campus this u-eek from points South, including Puerto Rico. Still winter-white and ready for Whipple’s weather, those of us who stayed home are listening to stories of their escapades, 30 Sarah Lawrence College girls were also Puerto Rico bound but theirs was a serious trip They visited Puer to Rican slums and back country villages taking notes and listening to lectures "to find out what life there is re ally like,” They must have done a little extra-curricular sightseeing be cause they describe the Puerto Rican college boys as "hot blooded but harmless,” IN THE SPACE RACE Soaring over State College these days are two new mis sies, the Transit 1-B and the Discoverer XI. The Navy also launched the Polaris IRBM which paves the way for sub marines to launch from below the surface of the water. Life tells the launching story with pictures and shows the seven-day survival test inside a space capsule. The feature ends on the reassuring note that of the 13 missiles now in oibit we can claim 11 while the Russians have only two. SECOND SPRING FLING Life's double cover this week sports a scenic view of Lover’s Leap, a Tennessee natural won der. This is only one of a col orful spread of tourist spots arranged vacation - trip - like through six of our southeast ern states. With Life's map as a guide thoughts <?f a second spring va cation come to mind when one sees the tray dance in Hot Springs, Va., a giant-sbe barbe que, a fox hunt in North Caro lina and a 200-vear-old pirates’ tavern in Savannah. POLITICAL REFLECTIONS Just as campus politics and campaign tactics change so do those of the nation according to Len Hall, who guided Ike’s PAGE SEVEN campaign in 1956 and is now working for Nixon. TV and airplanes make the candidates' work easier by decreasing the tiring tours and whistle-stop speeches*. Voters are also bet ter informed. One old Maine voter says his children were brought up to think that Democrats had horns "now they see them on television and realize,some of them don’t have horns a’tall!” •60 CENSUS When the rollcall was totaled iast weekend 140 million Americans had been marked piesent. The 1960 census is on and the “nosecounters” keep counting despite unfriendly dogs and remote Hawaiian vil lages. This week's Life cames the full story from the map makmg to the perils of Ha waiian enumerators as they travel by boat and horseback to account for 64 racial com binations in the 50th stale. Even using pidgin English communication with some na tives is tough When one inter viewer questioned a Korean about his wuhine < woman) still in Korea, he answered "maybe rnakt (dead). Mavbe no maki Me no write” GET THE MOST FROM LIFE Take a look at the World's Week and see why the English were aroused by a statue of Princess Margaret described by one critic as a "badly groomed suburban young lady.” See San Francisco’s floating ballpark and Yul Brynner’s new bride. What goes through the mind of a golfer in the Masters tourna ment'’ You'll find it ail in this week’s Life.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers