TUESDAY. AUGUST 9. 1960 Red Coach Concedes U.S. Head Start in Olympics MOSCOW (P) The outspoken coach of Soviet track and field forces yesterday called the American team the best that country has ever assembled and conceded it should have a big head start in grabbing gold medals at the Rome Olym pic games. At the same time G. V. Korobkov, who has been nick- Softball Teams Approach End Of Competition Play in the intramural Softball Leagues draws to a dose this week. The• 489'ers lead the League A with a 6-0 record. Undefeated Alpha Zeta, pace-setters in League B, plays the Newlyweds tonight. If AZ wins they will face the League A winner in the cham pionship game Thursday evening. In League A play last week, AFIT won from Mexican Engi neers by forfeit; 489'ers heat Chrystal Lab, 12-11; Fuel Tech beat Meteorologists, 12-8. Crystal Lab beat AFIT, 8-7; Fuel Tech won by forfeit from Mexican Engineers. Fuel Tech beat AFIT, 12-2; Crystal Lab beat Meteorologists, 16-12; and 489'ers took a forfeit from Mexican Engineers. In League B play :ast week, AZ beat Goochos, 7-6; Newly weds won from Ag Ec, 9-8; and Mesons won over Chem Engi neers by forfeit. AZ won from Newlyweds, 11-5; Ag Ec took a forfeit from Chem Eng; and Mesons beat Bio Chem. Goodies beat Newlyweds, 6-5; Ag Ec beat Bio Chem, 4-3, and AZ beat Chem Engineers, 6-2. AZ beat Mesons, 16-2. Defending Champ Gains Golf Finals Jim Yerkes, defending cham pion, has reached the finals of the championship flight of the University Golf Tourney. The winner of this week's ! game between Bob Rutherford, 111, and Dave Stotz will meet . him for the championship next week. In the second flight Tom Williams will play Bernard Zavos and Bill Cobb will meet Ed Sarson. The winners of these two games will meet in the final. Engle Wins Sixty-Two Rip Engle's 10-year coaching record at Penn State is 62 vic tories, 28 defeats, and four ties. His overall coaching record in cluding six years at Brown is 100-48-5. named "Harry," said his own squad was superior to those which competed at Helsinki and Mel bourne,- yet was an unknown quantity in the light of rising com petition. "It is impossible to forecast the Olympic results," Korobkov told the Associated Press in the first appraisal of the strength of the ;two giants of the game. "But if there are any certainties they are John Thomas in the high jumps and Don Bragg in the pole vault. "I think America's Ray Nor ton will beat Armin Hary, Ger many, in the sprints and win three gold medals just as Bobby Morrow did at Melbourne. Glenn Davis and Lee Calhoun should take the hurdles and I , don't know who can beat the United States in the 1600-meter relay—l would say no one." Korobkov is a powerfully-built, one-time decathlon star with a thick neck and barn-door shoul ders, He speaks English almost flawlessly and looks and acts more American than Russian probably because of his longtime association in the Olympics and dual meets at Moscow and Phila delphia. He talked freely and casually of the Olympic outlook during the giant athletic pageant at Lenin Stadium. Korobkov said his Russian pro eges always admired and re nerted their American rivals. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 1 . • • U.S. Takes DavisilDi Cup AMERICAN LEAGUE I . • • Team W. 1.. Pct. GB , New York rig " .5t -- i ern! nals Fi Chirago ____ G 0 45 .51( !; Baltimore __ 611 46 .566 2 I Cleveland 51 49 .510 8 MEXICO CITY ftl)l—The UM washing ton 49 53 .460 11 Detroit 46 rni .455 - 13 1 1 ted States defeated Mexico, 3-2, in - Roston _ ___ 41 58 .421 1G ithe semifinal of the American Kansas CRY 39 GI .300 20 zone Davis Cup tennis competi . NATIONAL LEAGUE tion .yesterday when Barry Mac- Team W. L- Pct. GB Kay clinched the decision with a eittsburgh 62 40 .Gl2 Milwaukee 5G 44 .560 5 y 6-2, 6-4, 1-6, 12-10 victory over St. Louis . 5,,,...8 4 8 -558 ~s : : d Mario Llamas and Chuck Mc t'`"Angeles " ' 4 ' ' ss° "'''Kinlev defaulted to Esteban San Francisco 51 50 .505 11 Cincinnati 45 59 .433 IBl.;Reyes. Philadelphia 42 G 2 .404 21 1 :,, Chicago 39 63 .342 ?.3!:. U.S. Chess Men; Defeat Russians! The United States Student Chess Team whipped the Sovieti team to capture the World Stu-i dents' Team Chess Championship s in Leningrad last week. The U.S. team scored 41 points out of a; possible 52, the Soviet team scored 36. This is the first time the Uni ted States has ever won this tournament, according to Mor decai Treblow, graduate student in chemistry from Philadelphia and president of the Intercolle giate Chess League of America. The Americans did not parti cipate in 1959 and placed fifth in 1958. Leaders of th..: U.S. team were William Lombardy and Charles Kalme, neither of whom lost a game. Each won twelve and drew one. They were followed by Ray monds Weinstein, 81*::-2 1 , An thony Saidy, and Elmer Wednis, 4-2. Dr. Eliot Hearst, who gave a simultaneous exhibi tion at Penn State last 1011, played as alternate. MAJOR LEAGUES Originally, Earl Buchholz was scheduled to meet Rafael Osuna in the second singles match. But when the decision was clinched. both captains made last-minute changes. The McKinley default came as a result of a minor dispute. Chuck, a 19-year-old St. Louis sharpshooter, was leading l'eyes. 2-1, in the first set. having broken the Mexican's service in the third game, when rain began to fall. Officials waited about tlaee quarters of an hour and when the rain persisted, they rescheduled the match for today. U.S. Captain David e'reed ob jected, pointing out that his team had reservations t) leave right after yesterday's matches. There fore, he said, he would be forced to default. The final score was the closest ever in the history of U.S.-Mexi co competition. The Yanks now will meet Vene zuela in the final of the Ameri can zone competition et Cleve land, starting Sept. 15. The decisive match' went 22 games, the longest co•itest in Mexico so far. Mac Kay, No. 1 on the United States team, was mitch improved over his showing in the opening singles match Saturday against Osuna.