PAGE SIX Weiss Wins 3rd Lion Senior Paces Field In 3 Events Special to the Collegian WEST POINT, N.Y., March: 2 Penn State’s Greg Weiss' wipn the Eastern Intercollegi ate Gymnastics League’s all around championship here to night, marking th£ tenth con secutive year a Lion gymnast his won the award. 'The smooth-working senior scored 535.5 points in winning the all-around crowii for the third straight year. State junior Tommy Seward was second to Weiss with 498 to 489 for Corky Voas of Syra cuse. -T*\ e ' ®^" ar ® u *! d champion is de- around championship lasl night at cided by totaling the gymnasts’ __ . . . , . •scores in each of the six regular * CBr ' 7118 senior ster also leads EIGL events—the free exercise, individual events, side horse, stiH rings, long horse » *• * bars and horizontal'finals, coming in eighth with an •bar. The finals of the individual!B2. events will be held tomorrow. j Weiss is the only .Lion gymnast TONIGHT'S qualifying scores 1 ® quality for the "finals of the •will be added to tomorrow’s final side horse. The finals shape up scores to determine the individual ®* a two-man battle between the eastern champion in each event; n captajn and Grimaldi Weiss, turning in one of the greatest one-man shows in £IGL 'history, leads or is tied for the lead in three of the regular events. The Lion star paced the quali fiers on the still rings (92.5) and the parallel bars (97) and is tied with Army's Phil Costain for the lead on the horizontal bar (93). Weiss is also second to Ray Grim aldi of Syracuse on the side horse (94.5-90). Seward is leading the field in the free exercise. The stocky Nit tany gymnast scored a 94.5 to a 94 fdr Earl McConnell ol Pitt. Weiss is fourth with an 89. State's Gene Harlacher also qualified for the Weir Leads Chi Phi fo Win By KEN DCNUNGER [the last ten yeards to earn a tie Whenever the Chi Phi swhn-j“ ick U P four P° ints * or Chi ming team sliows up for an IMp m ‘ ‘' . meet, the chances are excellent! It didn’t seem like much at the that their number one man, Sam time, but after Delta Phi won the Weir, will either break or come relay in 1:04.2 those four points close to breaking an 1M mark, were just enough to enable Chi Last evening was no exception. - Phi to tie tbe meet at 16 aIL The powerfully built young man An extra event, the 90-yard from Morton, Pa., swam the free- '“edley relay, was needed to b«aik style in 30.6 seconds to come the toe.. Hall, Weir, and Rick within .1 of a second of tying theiHurford won this event easily, 30.5 mark be set last week. Weir enabling Chi Phi to win the meet also won the breaststroke in 37.6.! In other action, Jon Hesch led However, it was the fine back-, stroke performance of A] Hall that, saved Chi Phi from utter disaster.. Hall, clipping three seconds off; his best previous effort, over-; took Delta Phi’s Bill Wilkens ini Lucas Named College Basketball Player of Year NEW YORK (AP)—;For the sec- teammates on the All-America, end straight year, Jerry Lucas of 1 All are seniors. Lucas, Dischin- Ohio State was named yesterday ;ger and Walker are repeaters the 1962 college basketball player,from the 1961 All-America, of the year by the Associated! Lucas earned player of the year Press. . ; honor on the basis of. ballots from The honor followed in the wake l^J^^ riters and of Lucas being named to the col-, f - lege basketball All-America for! the third straight year, the first * I^,° time this has happened since Os- 1 vmftfofandSS tbC Uni 'Oh£sS to'’to?: straight Big vers.ty of Cmannati. Ten titles, missed a perfect 1,610 Terry Dischinger of Purdue, by only 21 points. He was omitted Billy McGill of Utah, Chet Walker from only three ballots, getting of Bradley and Len Chappell of 317 -firsts and two seconds for a V/ake Forest were named Lucas'!total of 1,589. THE APPLICATION OF A DESIGN APPROACH by William Johnson Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Michigan Sponsored by STUDENT LANDSCAPE SOCIETY Kfareb 5, 1962 HUB AuditoHsm BUSINESS MEETING 7:30 PJd. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA SURPRISING STATE junior Bud Williams ranks, second to Weiss on the still rings. Williams had an 87.5. Seward qualified for theJlinala jvith an 80.5, but Larry Yohn broke and failed to make the cutofC The Lions placed two men in the finals of the long horse vault —F. P. Sforza (87) and Dave Heil brun (88.75). Weiss has apparently sewed up his third straight eastern p-bars title. He boasts a ten-point spread on the field with a 97. Army’s -Ed Hendren is running second with an 87. Seward is third behind Weiss INavy to a 19-13 win pver Fayette, land Balsam’s relay team turned in a 1:092 docking Vo nip Lyons :3 by the same score. Irvin Newby iwon the freestyle for Lyons 3 in 35.0. , ' ■ = Weii Point for the third straight the Qualifier* in three of the * * * and Costain on the horizontal bar iwith an 89.5. I In the four special events, Voas is leading the tumbling and! tram poline; Jim Sloatof Navy is!ahead on the flying rings; and Davy’s Bill'Pfingstag has climbed the 20-foot rope in 3.7 seconds] . | IM Results BOWLING J INDEPENDENT LEAGUE*C VilQi ' IHitj Eoslnam 4 Cattea*oe4 < Holy R*l)rr> X £mm 4Va4 Oaaa 4 Lahich S Watts • Lancaster t Kiac Pina • Hath Game—XL KICK EX. 234 Hi*h Scries—BlLL CLARK. Nary E»*i- Mtn.Kl V Fraternity league o Kappa Delta Rbo I Trianrls ,i t Sicaa Pi 4 Beta giema XW 4 ZcU Beta Tao iTkcta Chi 2 Pki Epsilon Pi 4 Siena Tau ft-— —2 Alpha Phi Delta SLaaih4a Chi Alpha « Hiah Came—BOß ZAMBONI. Alpha Phi Delta. 244 I Rich Series—BOß ZAMBONI, Alpha Phi Delta. t»i | BASKETBALL ; INDEPENDENT ! . Nlttany 42 (74) 47 NitUap 21 (24) II Nittaar S 3 (4-1) QlNittaor S 3 (1-4) II NitUny U (4-1) 1 Nit 41 (24) ffL I Panthers (1-4) 23 Nittasp 21 (14) 14 Hawks (14) 30 Sharks <44)1 20 Hick Scorer—AMBROSE DKYANST, Nit teny (l, 10 ’ FRATERNITY A. Chi Rbo (14) 27 Sic. AL Ep. (44) 21 Kappa Sis. («4I UAL Chi Sic. (24) 0 Pi Kap. Phi (14) IS Pi Ua Phi (44) 12 Delta Chi (24) 24 Sic. Tao a i*4) 17 Hick Scorer—JOHN GANDER, Slews Alpha Epsilon, 13 Law Set To Test Arm’ FORT MYERS, Fla. non Law, out of action since last July with a shoulder, injury, will pitch tomorrow in a Pittsburgh Pirates’ intra-squad contest. Law. will be on the mound for three innings, in the nine-jinning game between the Logans and the Groats. The other pitchers will be Bob Friend and j Elroy Face. | In this age of conformity It's not too often you find anything that stands Chit. (Except perhaps astronauts, pro fessors, a few students and CAMPUS CLEANERS,) So if you enjoy deeding with an outstanding cleaners, drop off your Spring wardrobe at Campus Cleaners,! 10 E. Beaver Avenue, next to the Post Office. All-Around ' j StateToHosf EIWA Tourney Penh State will be host for the 58th annual championship tourna ment of the 16-team Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Associa tion next Friday and Saturday. The championships will climax the season’s competition in the EIWA, the nation’s, oldest .cojle giate wrestling league, which was formed by Columbia, Pennsyl vania, Princeton'and Yale in 1&05 and held, its first tournament the same year. _ | Twelve teams—Brown, Cor nell, F&M, Harvard, Lehigh, Penn State, Pitt, Rutgers, j Syracuse-, Temple, Army, and Navy—have] joined the association since 1005.1 Pitt was. the latest addition, jbe-i coming the 16th member in 1854. i Lehigh and Penn State lead in team championships. The Engi neers moved in front last year |by winning their 14th title. Penn [State owns 13 titles outright and I shares another with Pitt. Cornell 'ranks third with 12, followed.! by I Yale With five full titles and fwo I ties. Lehigh and Pitt loom asithe [favorites in this year’s tourna ment. i PENN STATE LEADS in indi jvidual titlists with 78, followed by Lehigh with -75, and Cornell with 74. Pena State and Lehigh Sonny Shuns Money j PHILADELPHIA (AP) Sonny Liston said yesterday he will I not let money stand in' the way of a heavyweight title fight with cham pion Floyd Patterson. But the No. 1 challenger for the crown defended his right to. try for as good a financial deal as he can wrangle from Patterson land his advisors. He also conceded the champion’s right to try to get the challenger as cheaply as -pos sible. ■I: . i Confusion and Chaos •l . reign at MIL BRAWL | I TONIGHT «:3t-12:30 i■ r ■ . : HUB Ballroom IVY ROCKS i— ROTZ TWIST •■- . ' ■ *' s . ; t Geafries 75c SUg SOe i SATURDAY. MARCH 3. 1962 each produced three champions in last year’s tournament at Beth lehem, with the' others coming, from Pitt and'Navy. Four.of last year's champions, will-return for this year’s tourna ment They are,Penn State’s Ron Pifer, who won the 147-pound crown, Lehigh’s Kirk Pendleton (157) and Jim Detrixhe (177), and Pitt’s Dick Martin, the 123-pouhd winner. The team trophy, > emblematic of the EIWA championship, will be awarded to the team scoring the -highest number of points in [the two-day affair. Other awards [will include the Coaches’ Trophy Ito the meet’s outstanding wres tler, and the John !A. Fletcher [Memorial Trophy, to the wrestler who has scored the highest num ber of points in EIWA tourna ments. Lehigh’s Thad Turner was named the outstanding wrestler last year) and Penn State heavy weight Johnston Oberly received the Fletcher Award; Both have been graduated. BASKETBALL SCORES College ACC Touzoamenl ' Wikt'For«t SB, Sootb Carolina 7B Southern Conference Tournament „ BcaifiuJa West Virtrfnta Bs, Gcone* IfathbiftM TS i Other Secies Brows S7 t Harvard (J Pens tl. Cornel) SB (2 «i) Princeton 92, Columbia 47 Scholastic PIAA IHA:I« Clsas A semMiaoJ Erie Toth U. Hickory SI PIAA Dbt IB ‘ Qua C wat-flnil Coiaeiat Lake 17, Law tea— Itark 49 WPIAL CUM A QoaHoMfoal Jord City St. PIAA daaa. B AnavUW 70, Kmaard D*)e.4t PIAA Diet. 4 Om A tTtlHabitrr Coal Twr. 77, Danville. 44