FRIDAY. JULY 1. 19r60 Olympic Tr outs, Today, Tomorrow Vets, College Stars to Vie For U.S. Track Team Berths Lion Stars Compete For Olympic Spot Penn State's distance ace Steve Moorhead and former Nittany Lion captain, Ed Moran will be among some 200 prospective Olympians competing today and tomorrow in the 1960 final Olym pic Track and Field tryouts at Palo Alto, Calif. Moran, a 1959 Penn State grad uate has already met the new minimum standards by achieving the qualifying time Last week when he finished third in the Na tional AAU meet at Bakersfield, Calif. Moran's time for the 1,500 meter distance was 3:43.7. Jim Grelle and Lasslo Tahori. the distance runners who finished ahead of Moran, were also well under the qualifying time of 3:45. Grelle, in winning the metric mile recorded a record 3:42.7. To gain a spot on the United States Olympic team, Moran must finish in one of the top three places in these tryouts. Moorhead, although he failed to place in the National AAU meet has progressed rapidly since his surprise showing at the IC4A meet held at Villanova this spring. Shaving a full 16 seconds off his time, the Lion sophomore. running in the third steeplechase of his career, placed second in the NCAA Championships two weeks ago. Rated as an underdog in the final competition, Moran will be opposed by leading contend ers such as Duke's Gary Wei singer; Pete Close, Quantico Marines; and George Larson, Oregon. If Moorhead finishes among the top three places and thereby gains the trip to Rome this Aug ust. it will be the second time in a decade that one of Chic Wer ner's proteges has competed in the Olympic steeplechase. In the 1952 games, Horace Ashenfelter, a Penn State product won the event at Helsinki. Skowron's Homers Swamp Athletics NEW YORK (X) The league leading New York Yankees hit five home runs, including two by Bill Skowron and one each by Roger Maris, Mickey Mantle and Tony Kubek, in a 104 rout of Kansas City yesterday. Ralph Terry's effective seven-hit pitch ing in the 85-degree heat sent the Athletics down to their seventh straight defeat. With the help of homers by Jer ry Lumpe and Andy Carey, a pair of former Yanks, Kansas City had built up a 3-1 lead going to the last of the third. Kubek's homer cut the lead to one run and Maris' 25th of the season with Hector Lopez on base put the Yanks out front to stay. It was the Yanks' 21st victory in 29 games in June, thanks to the slugging of Maris , and Mantle. Maris hit 14 homers during the month and Mantle hit 12 of his' season's total of 13. Rip Engle, Penn State football coach, played end on the 1929 Western Maryland team which posted a record of 11 victories and no losses. Recommending our fresh fish dinners! Enjoy a seafood feast . . . your favorite fish, extra fresh, extra delicious! By JACK STEVENSON Associated Press Sports Writer STANFORD, Calif. (2!P)—Uncle Sam's best track and field stars, including eight who won 1950 gold medals in Australia, match speed and strength today and to morrow for coveted places on the United States Olympic team. Some of those eight stars of four years ago may not even qual ify for this year's team in com petition rated the toughest ever., "Heartbreaks will be plentiful! here on Saturday night," forecast, Larry Snyder, the Ohio State! coach who heads this nation's! Olympic track and field forces.l "The competition is the best it's ever been—ours and in every oth er country with perhaps only one or two exceptions." Seeking to defend Olympic titles are Parry O'Brien in the shot Put: discus thrower Al Oer ter, hammer thrower Harold Connolly. broad jumper Greg Bell, high jumper Charlie Du mas, 200-meter sprinter Bobby Morrow, 400-meter hurdler Glenn Davis and 110-meter high hurdler Lee Calhoun. Only Connolly, Oerter and Da vis are strong favorites in the competition among qualifiers from the armed forces, colleges andi national AAU. Davis, former Ohio State star ; now a junior high school teacher, typifies the veteran. He started training before Christmas, surviving injuries, and' only now appears to be round-1 ing into top shape. He won the Olympic title in 50.1 seconds, but declared, "I think it will take a 49.6 to win here and the field is tougher than in 1956." Veterans made up 25 per cent of the field, with collegians pre dominating. "You have to admire these old er "fellows," says Snyder. "They have come here in top condition to work out after their jobs were finished." Competition in the sprints ap pears close all the way with Ray Norton, the AAU king, and NCAA champion Charlie Tidwell of Kan sas the favorites. A crowd of 30,000 was ex pected for today's opener and 45.000 for tomorrow's televised events at Stanford Stadium. On the docket this evening are the hammer throw, high jump, javelin, shot put, broad jump, 400- meter hurdles, 100-meter dash, 5,000-meter run and 800-meter preliminaries. Today's main program starts at 5:30 p.m. (7:30 p.m. EST) and tomorrow's at 1 p.m. (3 p.m. EST). Jacks Joins Staff At Slippery Rock AI Jacks, Penn State quarter back from 1956 through 1958, will join the football coaching staff at Slippery - Rock State College in September as an assistant coach. • , One of the top passers in Penn State history, Jacks completed 96 of 205 aerials for 1,147 yards and '9 touchdowns during his colle giate career. He enjoyed his best year in 1957, when he fired 53 strikes in 103 attempts for 673 yards and 5 touchdowns. He served as an assistant fresh man coach at Penn State last sea-' son while pursuing graduate studies. Factory Authorised VOLKSWAGEN Sales—Parts—Servies New '6O Deluxe Sedan WYNO SALES CO. MO E. Third St. Williamsport, Pa. Phone 34183 EUTAW HOUSE EM 4-1039 13 MILES EAST OF STATE COLLEGE ON ROUTE TO LEWISTOWN SUMMER COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA MAJOR LEAGUES American League, W. L. Pct. CR New York _l9 25 .315 --- x-Clevetim.l 37 27 .573 2 1 3-44441timare 41 33 .577 2 x-Chic444o _:1.14 31 .537 5 Detroit _ __:i2 34 .135 x-Washington N. an:um City ___.-- Booton —Platy night game,' xx-Pittihungh Milwaukee K-Sati Fran _ 36 31 .537 6 St Lou ix Cincinnati _ Angeles 32 35 .47R IO Chicago , .7 SI 1$ 1 ; 41 .406 13. —Playing night game Coaches Group Elects Werner VP Penn States Charles (Chic) Werner has been elected vice president of the National College Track Coaches Association. Moscow Approves 011ie Jackson, Abilene Christian • • College, is the' 'newly elected , Vistt of Cage Team president. SEATTLE (11)) Seattle Bak-, Werner, Penn State coach lers got permission by telephone! . since 1933, was a member of the; from • Moscow early this. week to U.S. Olympic coaching staff in make a basketball tour of the won curtain countries this sum -1952, and in 19'59 was head coach of the U.S. team for the Pan-; mer • American Games. Manager Bud Howard said he'll take 11 players on the tour be- At Penn State, his cross-coun - ;ginning with games in Warsaw, try teams won NCAA and IC4A, Poland , July 9-12. The Bakers also titles on two occasions. His track ;are scheduled to play teams in teams won IC4A outdoor titles in; Leningrad, Tiflis. Moscow and 1942, 1954, and 1959. and indoJarpossibly in Ro‘nania and Hun championships in 1942 and 1959. ; gary. before returning home in His 1960 team missed winning the; A ugust. outdoor IC4A crown by one-half; The Bakers, a National Indus point. atrial Basketball League team, also had hoped to arrange games in Israel and Greece. But How ard said the financial problem was too much for this. DeLong Selected Baseball Captain Dick DeLong. of Allentown, is Penn State's newly elected base ball captain for next season. Right fielder DeLong owns a two-year batting average of .288. He hit .368 and drove in 19 runs as a sophomore and was a key . player in the Nittany Lions' drive to the 1959 NCAA District Two championship and a fourth-place berth in the College World Series' at Omaha, Neb. This year. his average dropped off to a .207 as Penn State won . nine of 18 games. DeLong is a 1957 graduate of : Allentown High School, where he! co-captained the baseball team' and played varsity football. Non-Lions Four members of Penn State's grid coaching staff are not Penn State graduates. They are Earl Bruce, Washington and Jefferson; Frank Patrick, Pittsburgh; Joe Paterno, Brown; and J. T.White, Michigan: 31) 31 .469 9 , : j 211 42 .3AZ 15 1, 1 21 43 .353 17 National Leastue 1,. Pct. GB 21 .631 -- :14 27 .555 _33 33 SSS 9'; _32 35 ,17:4 111 Vet Returnees To Fill Gridiron Halfback Posts Penn State's halfback corps is well stocked with veteran runners for the approaching 1960 cam paign. Graduation took only Jack Ur ban, a third stringer, from a 19.51 Y halfback aggregation that acd counted for 1031 rushing yards. ; Of that total, 237 yards were! gained by Dick Hoak, who will ; play quarterback this year. Veterans Sim Kerr, Dick Pae, Roger Kochman and Eddie Caye i top the 1960 halfback roster. Kerr,; a starter for two seasons, was; rushing runner-up last year with 320 yards and a• 4.8 average. Pae; netted 178 yards for a 4.7 aver-' age. Kochman gained 167 and posted! a brilliant 11.1 average, and Caye: picked up 129 yards with a 4.8, average. Kochman is best, remembered for his 100-yard kickoff return against Syracuse, and for scoring the only touchdown in Nittany Lion's 7-0 Liberty Bowl triumph over Alabama. Of the untested halfbacks, Al Gursky, a freshman fullback in 1958, Bob Kline, Hal Powell, Bud dy Torris and Chris Weber looked impressive during spring drills. ;Penn State Infielder !Named 1960 All-America Penn State's Larry Feglev. named to the 1960 NCAA All- American baseball team. and to the District Two All-Star team. compiled a career batting aver age of .331 for the Nittany Lions. The star second baseman from Allentown hit .324 in his sOpho- More year, .294 as a junior, and' .375 this year. He's Penn State's: first All-American choice since' pitcher Ed Drapcho was tabbed in 1957. Easy Going! M.411411,MW k# dial, available with 4 0 .Erp black background, .R 4 77 Winds of you wear it . • . automatically. ~„1 4f t Bud g et Terms 4141ys "1- *Pr.,..icled scot restv."lll.spee,.!