PAGE FOUR Pro Baseball Set for Draft NEW YORK VP) = Profes sional baseball clubs Will hold their 1968 winter draft of January high school ; gradu ates and eligible collegians on WILLIAM D. ECKER STAMP IT! litk lihN ___ IT'S THE RAGE il„,.youuNNlss ) REGULAR ~ mop- 24%.:?: MODEL ... ANY $ 3 LINE TEXT The flout INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL POCKET RUBBER STAMP. I/2" x 2". Send check or money order. Be sure to include your Zip Code. No postage or handling charges. Add sales tax. Prompt shipment. Satisfaction Guaranteed THIS MOPP CO. P. 0. Box 18623 Lenox Square Station ATLANTA, GA., 30326 International Films Presents: (Italy . 1954) LA STRADA Directed by Federico Fellini with Anthony Quinn, Giulietta Masina, Richard Basehart. Thursday, Jan. I I, 1968 HUB Auditorium 7 & 9 p.m. 50c Coming Jan. 18 "The Virgin Spring" (Bergman) NOW GOING ON! i.:. _~ Reductions on all fall and winter merchan- NOW dise ... quality fashions designed for you. Sale starts tomorrow—shop and save on dresses, coordinates, skirts, blouses, slacks, TWICE AS sweaters, coats, accessories . . . PLUS all your needs ... at The Carriage House and BIG! the Alley Cat. AV t sft R Air s iy l i, lB : • SAVE to cf ewk . , - ie,,, totile • r , INAL_NPF Che Carriage')Joust Tom en's fashions • No 109 PUGH STREET 0 STATE COLLEGE kitten cousin Jan. 27 in Nev York, base ball Commissioner 'William D. Eckert announced yester day. The regular phase of the winter selections will be held first followed by the secon dary phase. Eligible for the regular phase are high schoolers graduating in January and collegians, who have finished their fourth year. In the secondary phase, the clubs will pick players who have been drafted pre viously but who have not signed pro contracts. Clubs which drafted them will not be able to pick them again. Athletics First The Oakland Athletics will get the first pick in the regu lar draft followed by the New York Mets. The clubs select in inverse order of their fin ish in the 1967 season, alter nating by leagues. The draw for the secpndary phase was arranged by draw ing from a hat. In that draft Minnesota will be first fol lowed by San Francisco. Each of the 20 major league teams will be permitted one selection. Then each of the Class Triple A and Double A farms will get one pick, se lecting in the same order of their major league clubs. The teams' Class A clubs will have unlimited selection rights, also picking in the or der of their major league teams. For Good Results Collegian Classifieds OUR ANNUAL SALE oot ISi4~NC„~;`R HE'S BACK, and everyone who goes to the international gymnastics meet Friday - night will know it. Two-time NCAA All-Around champion Steve Cohen, Lion star for the past three years and now a student at the University of Pennsylvania medical school, is shown here chalking up prior to a side horse routine. F/ 0 141 4 .9 04 0;* 4014. Be here at 9 a. m. sharp! Sale continues thru January 161 . . . Hurry inl just a few feet and across the street front the Carriage House... into Calder Alley! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA t 4 r , t , ' ?•.Rt - S4 Baseball Headed For San Antonio? SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) A group of San Antonio busi n •ssmen will make a bid for a major league football franchise at the Feb. 14 meeting in New York of football club owners, tilt. San Antonio News said yes terday. In a story by Executive Sports Editor Dan Cook, the paper said that the group will "push" for entrance into the National Football League, ex pected to expand in 1970. The San Antonio group is headed by Harry McEldowney, ar executive with a San An tonio brewery The paper said Seattle appar ently already has one of two NFL franchises expected to be available. • Penn State Arab Club Announces AN ELEMENTARY COURSE IN ARABIC Mondays and Thursdays at 7 p.m. Room 215 Willard Building The first meeting will be held on Thursday, January 11. CITIZEN ' S FOR EAa IN VIETNAM Next Meeting: Come to hear exciting news! We are close to a major political break thru in this Congressional District. We'll be planning our 1968 political efforts, which are coming along real fine. Join us? WEDNESDAY FELLOWSHIP HALL JAN. 10 8:00 P.M. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH (Courtesy Lutheran Student Org.) WANTED FOR PSYCHOLOGY EXPERIMENT Male University Students, Undergraduates or former PSU Undergraduates, Must be 21 or older, The experiment will be conducted in 9 sessions to be held on 9 of the 10 scheduled dates. Subjects must be avail able for all 10 of these dates. The dates are: January 24, 31, February 7, 14, 21, 28, March 6, and April 10, 17, 24 (all Wednesdays). Each session will be held in the chapter room of Kappa Sigma fraternity and will begin at 5:30 p.m. and continue until 10:30 p.m. (Sandwiches will be provided.) Each subject must participate in all 9 of the sessions that are conducted. Payment will be according to performance. It will vary from $5O to over $llO, with an average payment of about $B5 for the entire experiment. Those interested should sign up in person with proof of age, at the Institute For Research, 257 S. Pugh Street, from 9-12 a.m. and from 1-4:30 p.m., Friday, January 5, Satur day, January 6, and Monday through Wednesday January 8-10, until the quota is filled. Telephone inquiries may be made by calling 238-8411, but no telephone reservations will be accepted. Lions Aim for No. 4 By RON KOLB Assistant Sports Editor John Egli's had enough No one linoWs whether it was because of Holmes Cathrall, Penn State's freshman basket ball coach who was at one time a Marine drill sergeant, or whether it was the varsity coach's own doing. Anyway, th Lions better start getting aggressive soon or, as Egli put it, "Some toes are going to be stepped on." The 14-year coach has seen his team stumble lackadasical ly through the great( portion of its seven games, only three of - .which it won. He's decided that the aloofness has gone too far. A rigid "get tough" policy has begun. Battle Bullets Tonight is the first opportuni ty for the cagers to break out of their rut. At ti p.m in Rec Hall, they'll, take on the Bul lets from Gettysburg, who be fore last night's game with .Franklin and Marsh it had a 5-4 record. "We simply must get some lif , into this team," Fgli said last night. "The boys have to get more aggressive .and they have to start going after some body. I really think I have them in the right frame of mind to start moving." So far this year, just five or six players have carried the burden. Perhaps conscious of this fact, these same players could have fallen into a "my job's safe as the gold in Ft. Knox" illusion. Not any more, according to Egli, who the play ers would do well 3 start call ing "Mr. Egli." Must Push Starters "It's the same answer for victory that the football team had," he said. "We had to have someone in there pushing the starters, putting the pressure on them and their jobs. I think these two new boys have done it." . Egli was referring to his two varsity additions tLi week, Gregg Hamilton and Mike Egleston. Both were ineligible before Monday because of aca demic troubles, but now their presence could make a differ ence. "They seem ti, have put life into the second bunch, and as such, practices have been much more spirited," the coach added. "Hamilton is short (he's 0-0) and he isn't an expert shooter, but he's a h ady ball player, rugged, and a good ball handler. Once he's in face Bullets in Rec Tonight shape, he could find a place in the backcourt." Egli also has hopes for Egles ton, a 6-4 forward from Elk land. Both should improve as they get more and more ex perience, and as they mature, so will State's bench, and thus so should State's record. Jeff Persson, the team cap tain who appeared awakened JEFF PERSSON . . . Lion, Captain Fitness Program The College of Health and Physical Education , will begin its winter work-out program— a non-credit course in self improvement and physical fit ness—on Monday, January 22, 1968. This program will be open to all students and faculty members and will be held Mon day thru Friday from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. in the main gym nasium of Recreation Building through thf. winter term. IM Handball Ali men who wish to partici pate in the Lit, amural Hand ball Singles Tournament must register at the Intl amural Of fice, 206 Rec Bldg,, by tomor row afternoon. from a slumber it Saturday's 52-50 win over Kent State, is quite improved in leadership qualities, according to his teach. "He's been kind of docile, but all he needs is a rap in the mouth to get him mad, and he really goes to work. We need more of that." Whether they'll turn into the bloodthirsty crew Egli hopes Long NCAA-AAU Dispute May End NEW YORK UP) Theo dore Kheel, chairman of the special Senate Arbitration Board, promised yesterday that a decision will be made shortly on the long-simmer ing AAU-NCAA sports con trol dispute. "You can say that our find ing will be handed down be fore the first track meet at Madison Square Garden Feb. 9," the New York attorney and widely known labor ne gotiator, said. "We expect the principals to be morally bound to abide by the decision." Sparks in the bitter war over control of the nation's amateur sports flew again this week at the annual con vention of the National Col legiate Athletic Association. Plant Distressed Marcus Plant of the Uni resity of Michigan, NCAA president, said he was dis tressed over the repeated vio lations of a moratorium by the AAU and added: ' "The arbitration proceedings are not making much progress." The Rev. Wilfred H. Crow ley, president of the U.S. Track and Field Federation which is challenging the AAU's right to run the sport in this country, said his group would go to :ourt if the AAU suspended any athletes com peting in the Feb. 9 meet. The Feb. 9 event is the The Brotherhood of Delta Phi congratulates the Pledges of KAPPA DELTA and DELTA for their very successful ChristmaS Card Project TENORS of the world UNITE Sing Handel's "Israel in Egypt" with the University Chapel Choir, in Concert Choir and the University Symphony Orchestra. See Raymond Brown, 2I I East Chapel Collegian Ads Bring Results WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1968 they will, time will tell. How ever improvement better be quick with Pitt, West Virginia, Army, Temple and Syracuse coming up in the next six games. Before he looks ahead to those battles, he has to b et by Gettysburg tonight. And' for the first time all season, the Lion players will be competing among themselves in addition to the battle v, ith the Bullets. The southern Pennsylvania squad suffered a setback re cently when their number two scorer, 5-10 Rick Falk, frac tured his left ankle during a Christmas tot rnamert game. He had been averaging 15.9 points per game as a backcourt ace, hitting 43 per cent from the field and 76 per cent from the foul line. Gettysburg coach Bob Hulton doesn't expect him back before the end of the month. Sophomore Greg Gettle from York will take Falk's place at guard. Other player., include four lettermen: 6-2 Tom Hous er, 6-4 Ross Krumm, 5-11 John Stott and 6-3 Paul Trojak. Top prospects on the bend are 6.6 soph Chris Strunk, 5-11 Pete Mavraganis and 6-4 Fr e d Smith. Board Alen Houser leads the team in scoring as a a forward, ,also be ing rated fine defensive per former. Trojak is perhaps the strongest Bullet board man, while Krumm also adds re bounding support. Egli has indicated he'll start with the same five, including Jim Linden and Tom Daley at the guards, Bill Stansfield at center and Bill Young and Jeff Persson at forwards. All this talk about aggressive ness .and toughness end head rapping and Bullets is eAough to make anyone go to the Rec Hall Coliseum to see the Get tysburg gladiators fight the Lions. Who ends up with the highest score depends on hciw much spirit the Lion tamer has injected into his group. The way he talks, Egli will probably want to hear the growls and snarls loud and clear. ''„ Or else some toes are going to get stepped on. THEODORE KNEEL Madison Sqaure Garden In vitational conducted by the USTFF, and drawing many of the top Olympic hopefuls. If nonstudents compete, as is expected, the AAU demands AAU certification. However, there has been no word from the AAU whether suspensions would be meted out in case sanction of the meet is not asked by the USTFF. The latter insists it will not ask for AAU sanc tion.