tl19651210-000 "Vol. XVIII, No. 11 December 10, 1965 Carl Ragland, of Old Dominion, pins Lovelace to be named Out-standing Wrestler of the Towson Invitational. Christmas Party For Chrildren Is Planned The annual Christmas party, sPonsored by the WRC, will take place on Demnber 14. At thig time, both day-hops and tesident students will entertain underprivileged children from Cherry Hill Community Center and McKim Center. The bus from Cherry Hill C5mmunity Center will arrive at Van Bokkelen Auditorium at 7:30. The sponsors are to be there to meet the children and take them to their rooms. Several members of the group will pick up refreshments in the College Centre and take th eln to the rooms. From approximately 7:45 to 8:15, the children may tour the dormitories and see the door decorations. Each Sponsor will have a party and the children will receive the gifts which the sponsors have gotten for them. From 8:15 to 8:45, Santa Claus will be in Stephens Hall A uditorium to give gifts to the Children All children must be .._back in Van Bokkelen Audi-f"" lum at 8:45 to board the bus for Cherry Hill Community 'enter. The bus from McKim Cen-ter arrives at 7:00 at the GYmnasium. Sponsors are to ""leet the children as they arrive and take them to Stephens Auditorium to re-ceive gifts from Santa Claus. At 8:00, these children will tour the dorms, have a party tiven by the sponsors, and receive gifts. Again, several of the sponsors should get the refreshments from the (allege Centre and take them to the party. ,_The children from the McKim 'titer must return to the Gym at 8:45 and be ready to board the bus; the bus leaves at 9:00. While many students may sPonsor one child, it has 1,klen requested that they 'ilnit the amount spent to $3.00 per child. The refreshments are provi-ded in the College Centre; spon-sors are asked not to give the children too much candy, etc., which may ""overstuff"" them. Sponsors are responsible for getting the children to the bus on time and for seeing that they get on the right bus. However, sponsors are not to get on the but to get the children ready-- there vil lbe students there to load them on the bus. Towson Hosts Wrestlers Westchester State College and the University of Delaware dominated the first annual Tow-son Invitational Wrestling tour-nament, held on December 3 & 4. Westchester took team honors in what was perhaps the finest exhibition of collegiate wrestl-ing in this area for many years. Perennial Mason-Dixon con-ference champion, Old Dominion College, was relegated to a poor third by the out-of-state power-houses. Tiger grapplers finished far off the pace in a tie with Washington and Lee Univer-sity and trailing Westchester, Delaware, Old Dominion, the University of Baltimore, and Western Maryland College. Nearly all of the wrestlers and their coaches expressed avid interest in this type of pre-season tournament. ""It gives us a chance to see where our weaknesses lie and gives us much added ex-perience before we begin our dual-meet schedule,"" com-mented one Westchester State grappler. Towson's entries, coached by Earl Killian, boasted many first-year boys. Having no inter-col-legiate records with which to gain seeded positions, they were forced to open against the better wrestlers and thereby greatly hindered their chances of win-ning. Summer Work Rated By Federal Exams The United States Civil Ser-vice Commission has announced that a nationwide competitive examination will be given for the purpose of selecting tem-porary summer employment in the Federal Government as an office assistant or as a science assistant. Candidates for the examina-tion should obtain a Civil Ser-vice Form 5000-AB. This form is available at many post of-fices, at U.S. Civil Service Com-mission Offices, and at Boards of U.S. Civil Service Examin-ers. table and chart interpretation. Sample questions will be pro-vided in advance. All citizens will be given equal opportunity to compete in the nationwide examina-tion. Those who pass the test will be permitted to file ap-plications with as many as six Federal agencies or in-stallations: three in the Washington area and three outside of Washington. Throughout the nation, the names of applicants who pass the test and send their notices of eligibility will be entered on agency rosters in ranked cate- The completed form should gories determined by their test be mailed to the Civil Ser- scores. Consideration will be vice Commission, Washing- given first to those in the top ton, D.C. 20415, before Jan- category. nary 3, 1966, to enable the candidate to take the two and one-half hour written test which will be given in various cities on a Saturday in late January or early Feb-ruary of 1966. The test, which is scheduled to be given only once, is de-signed to measure clerical skills, vocabulary, reading comprehen-sion, abstract reasoning, and In the metropolitan Wash-ington area, there will be a further breakdown of those who pass the test. In each test-score group, the names of those who live outside the District of Columbia, Vir-ginia, and Maryland will be listed first, and will be given first consideration for avail-able jobs. (Continued on Page 6) Denny Knott, Tow son's 130 pounder, scored the upset of the tournament, as he de-feated the Mason-Dixon champion in the 130 lb. class by a score of 3-2. This was Knott's first varsity collegi-ate bout. The teams from Delaware and Pennsylvania dominated the tournament from the start, as workouts sent nine of its 10 wrestlers and Delaware 7 of its 10 into the semi-final round. In amassing a total of 91 points, the Pennsylvania powerhouse earned four first places, two second places, two third places, and one fourth. Runnerup Delaware Uni-versity garnered three firsts, two seconds, three thirds, and two fourth place finish-ers. Old Dominion stood a good chance of catching the leaders after Friday's semi-final round, but failed to ad-vance any of its men into the consolation finals. The Virginia college had to settle for two first and three second place finishes and the tournament's outstanding wrest-ler Carl Ragland. Ragland pin-ned all three of his opponents in the 137 lb. weight class. Towson State advanced Knott (137), Mike Gray (167), Mike Ogden (191), and Dick Norris (hwt) into the semi-final round, but all four were then defeated. Art Jenne and Mike Jeannette were both injured during their two defeats and could not re-turn in the consolation semi-finals. The Tigers made a gallant comeback on Saturday as they moved three of five grapplers into the consola-tion finals. Both Denny Knott and Mike Gray re-bounded from their looses to score quick falls on Satur-day. Ed Hoffman (177) was the third, as he defeated Washington and Lee's Mun-son 5-2. Towson could score a maxi-mum of nine points on Saturday night, and they scored eight, thus earning a tie with Wash-ington and Lee. Knott pinned Simcock of Western Maryland in 7:40, Gray defeated McGlin-chey of Delaware 3-0, and Hoff-man pinned Oken of Loyola in 3:06. These three victories gave the Tigers three third place finishers. A complete rundown of the team scoring showed Westches-ter with 91 points, the Univer-sity of Delaware with 82, Old Dominion 58, Baltimore Univer-sity 34, Western Maryland 32, Towson State and Washington & Lee 24, and Loyola 6. SGA Passes Resolutions On December 12, 1965, the Student Government Associa-tion Senate unanimously passed the following two resolutions: RESOLVED: That SGA is reaffirming the rights of the in-dividual as stated in the United States Constitution and advo-cates a policy of ree expression by any individual regardless of race, creed, color, religion, or political affiliation, past or cur-rent. RESOLVED: That the SGA adopts the policy that any stu-dent can participate in the com-munity as his conscience dic-tates but cannot act for the student body unless empowered by the Senate or in the name of Towson State College unless empowered by the President of the College. After the resolutions were passed, a motion was made and passed that copies of these re-solutions be sent to the Presi-dent of the College, to the State Legislature, and to the Balti-more Sun and. News American. Ed Hoffman (177) of Towson pins his opponent and places third in the Invitational. "