The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 29, 1960, Image 7

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    TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 29.1960
Lion Harriers Place 4th
In NCAA Championships
By BILL BARBER
After winning six straight dual meets and copping the
IC4A crown, the Penn State cross country team finally met
defeat in the NCAA championships at East Lansing, Mich.,
Nov. 21. •
The Lions finished fourth behind Houston,
State, and Western Michigan
Al Lawrence of - Houston won
the individual honors for the
second straight year in the rec
ord breaking time of 19:28.
The 28-year-old, junior from
Sydney, Australia, led the pack
at the end of the first mile and
held his lead for the remaining
three miles to eclipse the previous
record set by Forddy Kennedy of
Michigan State.
Houston won the team title
by placing four men in the top
20.
The Cougar's John Macy fin
ished right behind Lawrenc'e
while his Australian teammates,
Barrie Almond and Pat Clohessy,
finished eighth and eleventh re
spectively.
Led by Gerry Young, Billy Rey
nolds and Clay Ward, Michigan
State scored a mild upset by
placing second. The Spartans had
previously been beaten by Penn
State in a dual meet and in the
IC4A championships.
"Our team wasn't running at
its best." Coach Chick Werner
admitted, "but I don't think any
college team could have beaten
Houston."
Werner felt his team could
have done better against Michi
gan State.
"The home course helped them
some but it just wasn't our best
effort," Werner said.
The Lions' top finisher was
Gerry Norman. who placed
sixth with a time of 20:06. The
sophomore star ran the four
mile course one second under
Kennedy's previous record time.
The only IC4A entrant to beat
Norman was Michigan State's
Jerry Young. In the NCAA meet
Norman downed IC4A champ
Bob Lowe and six other runners
Lion Riflemen
Face Full Slate
Penn State's rifle team, an 18-
point winner over Lehigh in its
opener, is slated for eight more
dual matches this season.
Five lettermen are on hand
from last year's team which post
ed a 4-4 record and placed sec
ond in the National Rifle Asso
ciation sectional championshins.
They are team captain John
Hook, Dick Gogolkiewicz, Bill
Kipple, John Boyer, Don Orr, and
John Davis. The team is coached
by Joe Watson.
The schedule: Dec. 10. Cornell;
Dec. 17 at Army; Jan. 7, West Vir
ginia; Jan. 14, Maryland: Feb. 11,
at Navy; Feb .13, at Carnegie
Tech: Feb. 25. at West Virginia:
March 4, at Villanova; March 25.
NRA Sectional Championships at
Kings Point, N.Y.
i
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who placed ahead of him in the
!Eastern Cchatnpionships.
"I was pleased to see Norman—
,only a sophomore—up there In
sixth," Werner commented.
Captain Herm Weber was
the Lions' second man across
the finish line, taking 17th in
20:35.
After Weber came Steve Moor
head 38th, Lionel Bassett 46th,
Ernie Noll 51st, and Dennis John
son 63rd.
Rounding out the top ten in
team placings were Colorado
State, Army, Air Force, lowa,
Miami, and Texas.
Rushing Smoker
Phi Gamma Delta
(Adjacent to West Halls)
Wed., Nov. 30 7-9 P.M.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNbYLVANIA
Five Veterans Bolster Matmen
Penn State's defending east
ern wrestling champions,
bolstered by five battle-tested
veterans and a host of eager
newcomers, buckled down to
some determined work this
week with the season's opener
only four days away..
The Nittany grapplers will host
Army at Rec Hall Saturday in
the 1960 lidlifter.
Michigan
Lion coach Charlie Speidel, as
much a Penn State fixture as
the Nittany Lion, will guide
State's mat fortunes for the 35th
year.
The peppery mentor will have
co-captains Jerry Seekler and
Johnston Oberly to lead the way
through a challenging 10-meet
schedule.
After meeting the Cadets, State
will face West Virginia (H), Mi
chigan, Lehigh (ED, Cornell,
Maryland (H), Navy, Syracuse,
Pitt (H), and Rutgers (H).
Seckler was undefeated in reg
ular season competition last year,
winning all-ten matches by deci
sions. He advanced to the finals
of the EIWA tournament at
Princeton, N.J.,before losing to
Thad Turner f Lehigh.
Oberly, last year's EIWA
heavyweight champ, won nine
matches, seven on pins. At one
point in the season he scored
five straight falls before being
held to a decision by Pitt's Bob
Guzik,
Oberly's clutch pin in the final
bout of the EIWA's gave State a
come-from-behind tie with Pitt
for the eastern title.
The "Big 0" advanced through
the consolation round to the semi
finals of the NCAA tournament
where he decisioned Roy Weber
of Northwestern for third place.
Ron Pifer, another returning
vet, was 5-3 as a sophomore last
year. He used his famous
double grapevine to score pins
in his first three varsity match-
Freshmen Welcome
Refreshments Served
By JIM KARL
SENIORS
V V eft
~•., ev I' 4111
es. but a shoulder injury slowed
him down the latter part of the Speidel has compiled a phen
season. lomenal record during his 34 years
Tony Scordo, a pleasant sur-t es head wrestling coach. During that time his teams
prise at 123, finished with a log s and
this vear.
have won eight eastern title
of 6-2-1. Scordo will move to 130 have
NCAA crown. That came in
11953, marking the first and only
Phil Myer, another talented time an eastern entry has won a
soph- last year, sported a 4-1-1 nationalmat title.
record and came within secondsi The former naval commander
of winning the EIWA 191-Pound,h as produced 49 eastern chain
crown. (pions and six NCAA titlists., His
The Lion grappler was aheadl t r
eams have gone unbeaten seven
of Torn Hall until the last 40 sec-Mimes and on ten other occasions
onds when the Pitt star scored tuthey lost'only Otte match'.
"THE INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENT OF
Chloe McFeeters was a beautiful coed who majored in psychol
ogy and worked in the I.Q. testing department of the University.
She worked there because she loved and admired intelligence
above all things. "I love and admire intelligence above all things"
is the way she put it.
Ned Putty, on the other hand, was a man who could take
intelligence or leave it alone. What he loved and admired above
all things was girls, "What I love and admire above all things
is girls" is the way he put it.
One day Ned saw Chloe on and was instantly smitten.
"Excuse me, miss," . he said, tugging at his forelock, "Will you
marry me?"
She looked at his duck-tail haircut, his black-rimmed glasses,
his two-day beard, his grimy T-shirt, his tattered jeans, his de
composing tennis shoes. "You are not unattractive," she ad
mitted, "but for me beauty is not enough. Intelligence is what
I'm looking for. Conic to the I.Q. testing department with me.".
f'gv - iffyag !limy
"Of course, my tiger," cried Ned and giggled and smote big
thigh and bit Chloe's nape and scampered goatlike after her
to the I.Q. testing department.
"First, I will test your vocabulary," said Chloe.
"Be my guest," laughed Ned and licked her palm.
"What does juxtaposition mean?"
"Beats me," he confessed cheerfully and nibbled her knuckles
"How about ineffable?"
"Never heard of it," guffawed Ned, plunging his face Into
her clavicle.
"Furtiver
"Wit{► fur on?" said Ned doubtfully
"Oh, Ned Futty," said Chloe, "you are dumb. Consequently
I cannot be your girl because I love and admire intelligence
above all things."
lie flung himself on the floor and clasped her ankles. "But I
love you," he cried•in anguish. "Do not send me from you or
you will make the world a, sunless place, full of dim and
fearful shapes."
•
"Go," she said coldly.
born and mute, he made his painful way to the door. There
he stopped and lit a cigarette. Then he opened the door and
started away to his gray and grisly future.
"Stay!" called Chloe.
lie turned.
"Was that," she asked, "a Marlboro you just lit?"
"Yes," he said.
"Then come to me and be my love," cried Chloe joyously.
"You are not dumb. You are smart! Anybody is smart to smoke
Marlboro, the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste, which
conies to you in soft pack or flip-top box at prices all can afford
at tobacco counters,, drugstores, groceries, restaurants and
trampoline courts all over America. Ned, Mover, give me s
Marlboro and marry ine."
And they smoked happily ever after. -
And if your taste runs to unfiltered cigarettes, you're smart
to try Philip Morris—from the makers of Marlboro. We
especially recommend Philip Morris's new king-size Com
mander—tong. mild, and leisurely. have a Commancter—
welcome aboard,
take down for the victory
On
„ with
11- m9guitian
8f "1 'W as a Teen-age Dwarf' ,"The Many
Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
NED FUTTY"
PAGE SEVEN
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