SATURDAY. APRIL 23. I^6o 8 Penn State Grapplers Move Into Final Day of Regionals By JOHN MORRIS Eight Penn Staters survived the first and second rounds of Olympic District II wrestling trials and move into the semi finals, slated to start at 2 this afternoon in Rec Hall. Ron Pifer and Paul Stegner go into the semis with mi penalty points on their records. Pifer drew a bye in last night’s action %vhile Str-iiner pinned Bob Cl thero in 2i seconds in their middleweight match. Ray Nunamaker gold, Ev Barber and Jc jan all advance to the f rounds with four penal! charged against then Scordo was pinned la by Dick Scorese and ei day's action with five points. Pifer, Barber and S-ordo all captuied victories in yesterday afternoon’s matches. Lahkv Pifer used a cross-body knee-lock to pin Dan Woodcock in §:43. Scordo decisioned Tom Canty in a close match and Ev Barber de cisioned Hal Byers before losing by decision to Bill Bailey in the night action. Another varsity wrestler, Artie Ravilz, dropped his after- —Colicßian Photo hv Ruk Bowtr noon match to Pat Reilly and LONG-LEGGED RON PIFER puts the pressure on Dan Woolcock was eliminated last night when seconds before the varsity matman pinned his man in the first he was pinned by Mark Murray round of the Olympic trials yesterday afternoon in Rec Hall, m 6:37. . . . . , . Ray Nunamaker was' charged " * " w w w with four penalty points bv get- meet for the championship to- charged with any penalty points ting pinned by _State College’s night, but both men are as- ‘but the loser gets four. Dave Thiel in 5. Al Fein- lure d ©f a spot in the final trials ! A decision winner is charged gold put up a good fight m his h . flyweight match before Tom Ba- “ toe, ' lows ' next W<N *’ 'with one point and the loser gets lent caught him coming in and V l6 tna ' s are s et U P ln a round- three, while in a draw both wres scorcd a pin in 3:22. ( robin tourney with 12 minute ti ers g e f two points. Six penalty Bill Oberly and Allison Henson' ma^c^es divided into four periods, points eliminate a wrestler, dropped out of the heavyweightj6-2-2-2. ' The semi-finals are scheduled to competition, leaving only John-' Final places in the meet are de-|get under way at 2 and the finals ston Oberly and Don Learman in.termined by the number of pen- start at 8 tonight. Plenty of tick the division. jalty points a wrestler receives. In ets remain for both the afternoon "Big O" and Learman will !a pin match, the winner isn’t and evening sessions. Netmen Meet Cornell Today With a 1-3 record Penn State’s Big Red. Bianck has the top indi tennis team has a right for better, victual recoid on the team, 3-1. things to come, but the outlook is never too bright when you have to play Cornell. The Lions, fresh from their firstJ win of the year, face the always, tough Big Red in Ithaca. N.Y.,j this afternoon and Coach Shermj Fogg will probably use the same lineup that downed Pitt, 9-0. Wednesday. I Captain Jerry Carp, 2-2 for the campaign, holds down tire num-| ber one singles spot for the Lions. Carp is a master of the soft shot and sports a strong overhand; slam Sophomore Jim Baker is the second man in the Lion lineup Baker also has a 2-2 recoid and all of the fiery netter’s matches have been close. ' Ever-improving Johnny Bianck will fill the third slot against the American Football Loop NEW YORK (>P) —A tentative deal for national television of American Football League games was announced yesterday by the American Broadcasting Co. The agreement could mean as much as 52,125,000 to the pro league in its first season. PIZZA! tantalizing delicious oven-hot pizza Delivered to you from MORRELL'S with selection* of these topping!: Pepperoni Hot Sausage Mushroom-* Ctound Beef Onion Ring* Frankfurters Delivered 9-12 refund of toll calls on all orders over $2.00 >mwmmwwmwimwmm»wmmmwww9w\ hn Tro :nal two y points . Tony d night iters to penilly Junior lettermen Di'-k Ludwig and .Don McCartney hold down the fourth and fifth spots in the jLion lineup. McCartney has been i steady ail year but Ludwig has ‘been off his game and his poor ishowing has hurt the Nittany I cause. i Vance Rea, in the sixth slot, iwas moved back into the singles I lineup against Pitt and responded jivith a convincing win. i Lanky Gary Moore and Carp 'will be the number one doubles ;team with Baker and Bianck and ! Ludwig and McCartney round ling out the starting alignment. I Cornell’s team Is made up large ly of iuniors and sophomores al ithough their number one man, jKay Champion, is a senior. Cham 'pion was the eastern intercolle giate champion last year. Don Rubella will play in the number two slot for Cornell, and' lefty Sam Dugan is slated to see; some action against the Lions. —John Morris (STUDENT . 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I*eat Boucher, Phi Delt, 15-5. 4-15. 15-* Hendemm. Theta Delta Chi. be«it Christen son. Phi Mu Delta. 15-11. 15-14 Independent Ruchenauer beat Settle. 15-10. 15-1 Mesh heat Annett. 11-15, 15-li, 15-8 Mostoller beat Peyton . l>-0, f 5-1 IM BOWLING League D TKE 4. Theta Chi 0 Phi Sigma Delta t, Sigma Nu 8 Sigma Phi Epsilon 4. SAE.O | Theta Delta Chi 1, AETPi 1 Acacia 4, KDK 0 jPiKa 1. Sigma Pi l | Phi Kpiilon Pi 3, Pi Lambda Phi 1 •Chi Phi 1. Beta Sigma Rho 1 lAChillho 4, Triangle 0 i Phi Sigma Kappa 3. Pbi Delta Theta 1 Factory Authorised VOLKSWAGEN Sale*— Parts—Scrrire New 'St Deluxe Sedan ... _tlS23. WYNO SALES CO. 1968 E Third St. Williamsport Pa. Phone 3-46&S Besselink, Finsterwald 3-Year-Olds to Race Lead in Golf Tourney in Pre-Derby Tune-ups NEW ORLEANS (.■?) Big \ flock of Kentucky Derby ißesselink, changing his golf swinghopefuls will lay their credentials after a long victoiy drought, and'on the line today in races for Dow Finsterwald, a big money 3-year-old horses at Aqueduct, Bay winner who rarelv changes ary-(Meadows ana Guiistream Park, thing, jumped into the lead ves-| Fourteen sophomores were en- ! a ‘" P om * °f tutored for the 575.000-added Wood $..7,000 Greater New Orleans, Memorial at Aqueduct. Nine are :°P cn - I eligible for the $125.000-added ; Tire 6-4. 210-pound Besselink deibv at Louisville on May 7. ,i ode home .with five bodies on> At Bay Meadows. San Mateo, the back nine for a five-under- Calif., eight weie entered for the par 67 and a 36-hole total of 100. $4(l,0()0-jdded California Derby, land half of them are eligtbile for JIM Soccer 'the Kentucky classic, i All entries for IM soccei must Gulfstieam Paik closes with 12 be turned into Dutch Sykes or onteied for the $lO,OOO Hallandale Donny Watkins in the IM office Pur.e, and two of them weie norn lnßec Hall by -1 30 Tuesday mated for the deiby. As everyone knows, the most serious problem faring American colleges today is the shortage of parking space for students' curs. Many remedies have liccn offered to solve this vexing dilemma. For instance, it has been suggested that ail students lie required to drive small foreign sports cars which can lie carried in the purse or pocket. Tins would, of course, solve the parking prob lem but it would make double dating imjwsaible—unless, that is, the boys make the girls run along behind the car. But that is no solution either because by the time they get to the prom the girls will be panting so hard that they will wilt their corsages. Another suggested cure for our parking woes is that all students smoke Marllioro cigarettes. At first glance this seems an excellent solution because we all know Marlboro is the cigarette which proved that flavor did not go out when filters came in—and when we sit around and smoke good Marlboros we are so possessed by sweet contentment that none of us wishes ever to leave, which means no gadding about which means no driving, which means no parking problem. But the argument in favor of Marlboros overlooks one im portant fact: when you run out of Marlboros you must go get some more, which means driving, which means parking, which means you're right back where you started. Probably the most practical suggestion to alleviate the campus parking situation is to tear down every school of dentistry in the country and turn it into a jiarking lot. This is not to say that dentistry is uniinjHirtant. Gracious, no! Dentistry is im portant and vital and a shining part of our American heritage. But the fact is there is no real need for separate schools of den tistry. Dentistiv could easily he moved to the school of mining engineering. Surely anyone who can drill a thousand feet lot oil can fill a simple little cavity. This experiment—combining dentistry with mining engineer ing-lias already been tried at several colleges—and with some very interesting results. Take, for instance, the case of a dental student named Fred C. Sigafoos. One day recently Fred was out practicing with his drilling rig in a vacant lot just off campus. He sank a shaft two hundred feet deep and, to his surprise and delight, he struck a detergent mine. For a while Fred thought his fortune was made but he soon learned that he had drilled into the storage tank of the Eagle Laundry. Walter P. Eagle, president of the laundry, was mad as all get out and things looked mighty black for Fred. But it all ended well. When Mr. Eagle called Fred into his office to chew him out, it so happened that Mr. Eagle's beautiful daughter, Patient Griselda, was present. For years Patient Griselda had been patiently waiting for the right man. “That’s him!" she cried upon spying Fred—and today Fred is a full partner in the Eagle Laundry in charge of pleats and nifties. © Speaking of laundries reminds us of cleanliness which in turn reminds us of filtered Marlboros and unfiltered Philip Morris—both clean and fresh to the tasle —both available in soft pack and Mp-top box. J^Shulman itlwr o/“l Was a Teen-age !>warf”, “Tke Many Loves of Dobie Giliis”, etc.) "NO PARKING" * * * PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers