PAGE SIX Gym Trials Set for Tonight Vega, Weiss , For Positions Olympic gvm coach Tom Maloney arrives on campus today with just 48 hours to choose a team to face the visit ing Russian Olympic squad in Rec Hall Saturday. Maloney has scheduled a try out in Rec Hall tonight for eight of Uncle Sam’s finest, including three Penn Staters. The informal tryout will start at 6 and admis sion is free. Penn State stars Armando Vega, Jay Werner and Greg Weiss will compete with five other Americans for the five starting berths against the So viets. Olympian Jack Bcck.ier is teaching in California and won’t arrive on campus until tomorrow, but he has been awarded a place on the United States team based on past performances. Beckner has been one of Uncle Sabi’s best all-around gymnasts for teh'years and is reported to be in good shape. Vega, Werner, Weiss and Cali fornia’s Bob Lynn will compete against Olympians Gar O'Quinn, Don Tonrv, Abe Grossfeld and Fred Orlofsky for the remaining spots. Three other outstanding gym nasts declined Maloney's invita tion to try out. Larry Banner will not be able 16 attend be cause of grad work at UCLA. Banner was the outstanding star for the U.S. in the 1960 Olympics. Jeff Cardinal!. Springfield star, and Illinois’ John Culbertson are both injured and won’t be able to compete. Cardinal! injured his shoulder earlier this .year and aggravated the injury against Penn State Saturday. Penn State coach Gene Wett Cortice Succeeds Enqle PITTSBURGH i.P) Jack Cur tice of Stanford has been elected president of the American Foot ball Coaches Association. He suc ceeds Rip Engle of Perm State. Engle was appointed a member of the NCAA rules committee for football, representing District 2. Ernest McCoy of Penn State was appointed chairman of the sports injury and safety commit tce. SENIORS Order Your NAMECARDS FOR GRADUATION AT Commercial Printing 152 E. Collet* AD 8-1784 Armando Vega Werner Compete on Final Team ■k ★ * Jay Werner ★ ★ ★ stone gives his three stars “a real good chance to make the team,” and thinks that the “real Competi tion may be between Lynn and our three Penn State boys.” Maloney will be the only judge at tonight’s tryout and he may not announce his starting team until tomorrow, according to Wettstone. Wettstone said that the scoring WE WOULDN'T BE ! EXTINCT TODAY pm i | Fish and Game Banquet IF WE ONLY HAD Friday, January 13 FRANK'S NOURISHING 7 ' _ _ .. 7 BORDER BOATS 1 IN OUR TIME Bar-B*Qued Chicken C. E. CABIN Halves and Wholes 50c and up I | Sponsored by FRANK'S P S O C HOAGIE HAVEN 11.00 Members $2.00 Non-Members Ticke| s ?"i I "‘°™ alion al SPEEDY DELIVERY HUB DESK 5 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. GALLi AD 8-8381 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA would be kept completely secret and Maloney would lake many things into consideration before making his final selections. "The main thing he will look for will be team balance. A performer who is outstanding in only a couple of the events probably won't make the team/' the veteran coach added. In international scoring each team enters six men in each of the six events. Only the top five scores for each team are counted in figuring team totals. However, the individual’s all-around scor ing is based on his performances in all six events. The six events for tonight and Saturday are free exercise, still rings, side horse, long horse vault, parallel bars and horizontal bar. The Russian team is scheduled to arrive tomorrow afternoon and may hold a brief closed workout in Rec Hall to familiarize them j selves with the apparatus and lighting. I Chicago Signs Ditka CHICAGO UP) The Chicago Bears Wednesday signed All- America ehd Mike Ditka of the University of Pittsburgh. Bear owner-coach George Halas Ditka’s signing at a special news conference. Matmen Will Meet lyy League Champs The Penn State grapplers meet Cornell at Ithaca, N.Y., Saturday, and the Big Red will be mighty welcome opposition for the Lions after consecutive losses to national powerhouses in their last two outings. Cornell, the perennial Ivy League champion, is no push over by any means, but after ★ ★ is shellackings by the nation’s third and sixth ranked teams, almost anybody except Oklahoma would look good to Charlie Speidel and his crew The outlook was rosy for State after early season wins over Ar my and West Virginia, but then the grapplers ran into a brick wall at Michigan, losing 17-8. Lehigh made if iwo losses in a row Saturday night with an easy 24-8 triumph. Bob Gunst triggered the Lion loss with a 6-1 decision over co captain Jerry Seckler. This put Lehigh out in front, 8-5. Kirk Pendleton followed with a pin over Ron Pifer and then Thad Turner scored a fall over John Barone to give the Engineers a commanding 18-5 lead. Leeman, who called his team "as good as any I've ever coached" after the win, is al* ready talking of a possible Eastern title. I He said if his boys performed up to their capabilities the Engi neers had a fighting chance to capture a crown in every weight iclass from 130 through 191. j But Leeman cautioned on leav ing Penn State out of the picture. “With boys like Dan Johnston, ;.Terry Seckler, Ron Pifer andj Johnston Oberly you'll be right! up there,” he said. ! j Lehigh’s victory was a tough j 1 one for Slate coach Charlie : Speidel, but it wasn’t entirely unexpected. i “Everyone knew of their, strength even before they met: jus,” Speidel said yesterday. “Now Pitt is the only team that has a: chance to squeeze past them. 1 “But Pitt only has four solid men—possibly five, and I’m not even sure that they can do it,”, he said. i "Maybe if we met Lehigh to- Financial Losses Fail to Stop AFL HOUSTON, Tex. UP) Ameri can Football League club owners today begin their winter meeting, iwith no indication that heavy in augural season financial losses ihave dampened enthusiasm for 1961. There had been predictions from some areas a year ago the ! AFL would not get through its first season. But the eight club .owners will begin two days of •discussions with expansion as one lof the items on the agenda. THURSDAY. JANUARY 12. 1961 By JIM KARL CHARLIE SPEIDEL ★ ★ ★ morrow we could edge them, but you can't conjecture or post mortem after it's over." Now that the Michigan and Le high disasters are past, State is over the roughest part of its schedule. The Lions still have to meet two other Eastern toughies in Pitt and Rutgers, but if pre-season form sheets hold true State should be favored over its other four opponents. Cornell, Maryland, Navy and Syracuse round out Ihe Lions' schedule.. State will try for its third win of the season against the Big Red Saturday. Cornell has victories over Yale and Penn, two Ivy League foes, and losses to Le high and Pitt. The Engineers shut out Cor nell, 27-0, while Pitt downed them 20-8. PANIC WHEN YOU TALK? A noted publisher in Chicago re ports there is a simple technique of everyday conversation which can pay you' real dividends in both social and business advance ment and works like magic to give you added poise, self con fidence and greater popularity. According to tills publisher many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by what they say and how they say it. Whether in business, at social functions, or even in casual conversations with new acquaintances, there are ways in which you can make a good im pression every time you talk. To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing skill in everyday conversation, the pub lishers have printed full details of their interesting self-training method in a 24-page booklet, "Adventures in Conversation,” which will be mailed free to any one who requests it. No obliga tion. Simply send your request to: Conversation Studies " r '% Diversey Parkway, Dept. 3751, Chicago 14, 111. A postcard will do.