• .._ ~.. ,„ ,„ . , . .. . . . . . , . , C V TODArS WEATFIERC -\ •' 4 •- - - • • ' -4 , -'' • ' . -i-. ' 41110, . CLOPP.Y.AND..COLDER: ~ • p ..„,,,,;,„ a. ... FORA BETTER .. ; . POSSIBLE SNOW .. .. ' 41 1t , •• - 00." PENN STATE . • . . VOL.' 51-- No. 100 ..w . i,.F:Avy. - 0:A::'.H0i4:,.. Prima r y Ele c tions. • -.The•WAA-WSGA 'election week begins today .when the- polls otieri. for ; the 'primaries , . at 10 a.m. Final .elections will be• held Thuriday: • Ba~lo'ting will .. take , place in Simmons, -McElwain, McAllister, Women's -building - and .Atherton, 'and will continue until 7 'p.m. Town residents :and coeds living.in the - Nittany Co:Opi may vote in ally 'of the:- dormitories. Ballot boxes "will also be plaeed- in the home economicspractice houses during one .of the meal hoUrs • WBA.-presidential'nominees are: Carolyn Barrett," Marilyn ,Wil ham's, and • Nancy .Worthington. The names of Virginia Miller, and Mary Jane Woodrow, candidates for WSGA presidency, will not appear on the, primary ballot. Votes will be cast for WSGA president in the final election only. • Vice-Presidency Rita Keeney, - Janice Robbins, Phyllis Szolack, Frances Stridin ger, Meredith Williamson, Mary Ann Wertman, and Terese Moslak are running for WRA vice-presi dency. WSGA nominees for vice president are: Joyce Buchanan, Yvonne Carter, Mary Lou Elliot, Janet Herd, and Doris Sher. The secretary-treasurer. of WRA will be chosen fr o m Olive Cochran, Barbara Wallace, and Betsy Anne Younkins. Sophomores running for the intramural chairmanship of WRA are: Dorothy Rose, Isabelle Dief enderfer, Barbara Holzka, Mable Marple, Ann Broomall, and Joan Kronewetter. Assistant Chairman Patricia Colgan, Nancy Lusk, Nancy Maloy, and Ann Skapil are nominees for WRA assistant intramural chairman. Coeds running for the senior senatorship. of WSGA are: Lila Barnes, Esther Beck, Ruth Jean Diehl, Barbara .Klopp, Nancy Mc- Clain, Grace Porello, Jane Stei ber, and Mary - Lou Transue. • Nine sophomores who - will compete for the WSGA junior senatorship are: Donna Esta brook, Bernadine Fulton, Alice Gutherie, Joan Hutchon, Virginia Opoczenski, Ruth Schliecher, Joan Yerger, and Joanne Williams. Joyce Gardiner, Ann Grieco, (continued on page eight) k'f, - sepds.• - : 50 Tra inees To Ca mpus • Fifty.- Air Force trainees . will arrive at • the College this week to begin • a 12-week instructional program for. Air Force • clerk typists,,according to an announce ment received from Wright-Pat terson Air Force base. Fifty.' additional trainees will arrive each • week for the next 15- weeks.' • The •PSchool of Edudation will conduct the program . with 'Dr. James Gemmell, associate profes sor.' of business' education and economics,, in charge. A . number of -Air. Force officers will be as '• signed here to manage military administrative matters. , President Milton S. Eisenhower said .that the program is in keep ing. •with. the policy 'of loitering the facilities of the College for service to• the armed . forces dur ing the , present emergency. The enrollment peak will be reached by . June 4 when there will he 600 trainees on campus for 'a period of three weeks. En rollinent%will then taper off . un til' the program ends in mid- September, according. to , present plans. Beginning - on. March = 19, in struction will be given in Eng lish, typing, filing, report :writing, and military correspondence. Nittany 'dorms will probably be used > to• house - the trainees. No plans as to_ instructors - or Class ro'oms':to be • Utiliied by - the. group have , beetr. released.. ' at• Carolyn Barrett ~. A.. , ........:,.. , :::::::0 ii. , :::• , .....':,i',3i : iiinkT. , ..:, , :,::Z::::,.:5i , i..5., 6`. ::.i:... .•, , , , :..n Vzi ,4:: , ;:? , .',: i'...i.':: riis.,.,p; ~ ,: , . .:4:::.:1: ..:,.. ii .: : : : : : . . 4 .; : : .:. ... : . : ............ i%. . ‘ ,.... , ; . ..; , .....: ,, ,.. , ,,. .'-..,..'''',::., : ,. .gs: , ' ,. . ?:''i:':::::::%<*i7:*W, '::f>' Nancy Worthington Laine, Moyer Promoted To Sr. Editorial Board Dorothy L aine and Joyce Moyer have been promoted to the senior editorial board of the Daily Collegian with the position of librarians, the senior board an nounced yesterday. Wrestlers Gain Title; Bwiers Second in IB Albat•cino, Koszarek Win Individual Honors By ART BENNING The' Nittany Lion boxers- brought Penn State second place honors for the second straight year in the Intercollegiate , Boxing association tournament at Charlottesville, Va.. last weekend. Coming through with 16 points,,the Lions were not able to thwart Syracuie's strong bid for repetition.' The Orange amassed 22 points, with Virginia taking third place with 15. *ln addition, the Lions came up with two Eastern champions and two runnersup. John Al barano; the Lion's bulwark at 145-lbs this season, danced, jabbed', and, hooked his way through three bouts in two days to take the'crown. The other Nittany chainpion is larruping Lou Koszarek, who finished off Army's Lou Morin for the second time .this year'in the semi-finals, and then chased Catholic U's Bill Maher: for three rounds in the finals, catching him just often enough to put the. decision.out.of. the doubtful class. Runner-up honors among the Nittanies went to Frank Gross, 135-lbs., and Maria Santangelo, heavyweight. The 135-lb. class was definitely a two-man affair featuring Virginia's three-time Ekstbrn dhalims," - Grover "Bat" Masterson and the Lion's Frank Gross. Gross,• who was decisioned by Masterson the week before,, met the only man to defeat him this season once again in the EIBA finals. For three rounds the two power ptulehers (oCtattsmLan_page-sici - - STATE, COLLEGE,. PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 13, 1951 Debators Take First In State Tournament At Temple University State, Lion Nominations Are Made By MARV KRASNANSKY and BUD FENTON With •James Worth getting the nod for the All-College presi dency, State party leaders Sun day nominated a full nine-man slate for the April 18-19 elec tions. Somewhat more cautious, Lion party members entered nomin ations for but three of the nine positions they will have to fill. Final nominations and election of candidates for both parties will be held Sunday. Donald Carlson, vice-president of the junior class and president of Androcles, was nominated for the All-College presidency on the Lion ticket. Carlson, however, did not appear to have the sup port of the party leaders. State Party Choices Rounding out the All-College recommendations of . the State party steering committee were (continued on page eight) NSA Voting Petition Gains 4,564 Names A final total of 4,564 names on - the National Student asso ciation absentee voting peti tion was announced yesterday by David ' Fitzcharles, chair man of the voting committee. Fitzcharles 'Najd that the group .was still working . on the plan to take the petition to Harrisburg, and that it would be delivered soon. Campus organizations have been writing letters to certain legislators, and it is hoped that the petition, plus the letters, will exert a working influence on the assembly, he said. The College men's debate team won the state deboang elbow. pionship over the week-end by corning out on top in a field cf 29 colleges at the state debate and forensic tournament alt Tempia university. Another ,Pene. State meals team tied tar third stendSog ire the Brooklyn college tourney, also held over the week-end. This team Tribunal For West Dorms Proposed A proposal to organize a West dorm tribunal was brought before the . West dorm council last night and was referred to a committee which will investigate the matter and report back to the council at the next meeting. The judiciary body, proposed to the council by Martin Berkowitz, a resident of the area, would con centrate chiefly on trying men who are accused of violating study hours and otherwise caus ing disturbances or destroying property. The council also voted to fur ther extend support to the West Dorm "Interpreter." At a previous meeting, the council moved that the "Interpreter" be put on a trial period of three issues to see if the council would continue its financial support. Refute Charges The council's representatives-at large to the Association of Inde pendent Men's board of governors refuted the charges that they had consistently voted against the council at the board meetings. The council passed a motion making the representatives ex officio members of the council, as was requested by Richard Bard, AIM president, at the meeting last week, when the question was first brought up. James Dunlap, investigating the pickup and delivery of laundry (continued an page eight) Maurey, Rubino Lead Grapplers To Victory By GEORGE GLAZER Two individual champions, Don Maurey and Mike Rubino, and two second place finishers, cap tain Homer Barr and Don Frey, led the way for the Penn State wrestling team's first Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling association crown since 1942. Joe Lemyre, 167-pounder, clinched the title for the Lions in the consolation matches of the 47th annual EIWA championships Saturday night in Rec hall when he defeated Army's Dean Mulder, 3-2, for third place in his class. The Nittanies scored 28 points while second place Lehigh copped 20 markers. Cornell, in third place, had 16, and Army finished fourth with 14. Graveson Cops Trophy • Yale's George Graveson won the coaches' trophy, awarded annually to the outstanding wrestler of the tournament. Graveson decisioned Navy's Don Thomas for the 167-pound title. Maurey, third-seeded, took a 6-4 desicion in the 137-pound class from Columbia's Bob Hartman, who had been unbeaten in 13 previous matches. At the end of the third period, Hartman had tied the match at 4-4, but Maurey had two minutes time advantage and became the first Penn Stater to take a 1951 EIWA title. Top seeded Don Frey, in 147, lost a 7-4 deci sion to Cornell's Frank Bettucci. It was a complete turnabout of the 2-1 decision that Frey took from • (Contizated ou page six) So® PSchwo Pooh Two competed with 43 college teams from New Engi nd, New York, and Pennsylvania. While the men were sweeping the state championship, two Penn State women were placing in the women's division of the state oratorical and extempor aneous speaking contests at Tem ple. Peggy Fahringer came in second in the oratorical contest, and Greta Weaver placed third in the extemporaneous speaking contest. The same foursome which per manently won the Washington and Jefferson cup for the College last month, won another cup at the. Temple tournament. The cup must be won three years in a row to become a pelmanent trophy. Harry Kondourajian and David Lewis debated the affirmative and Marlin Brenner and Clair George debated the negative. Highest Point Average Th e affirmative and negative teams came out of the four elimi nation rounds with the highest point average of any team in the tournament. The affirmative team beat Pittsburgh, Slippery Rock state teachers, and Temple in the eiliminations. It lost to Swarth more. The negative team defeated La Salle, Mount Mercy woMen, and Allegheny, defending cham pions. It lost to Carnegie Tech. Affirmative and negative teams from Penn State, Bucknell, Penn sylvania, and Temple were chosen to compete in the semi-finals. Penn State defeated Bucknell, and Penn defeated Temple to gain entrande in the finals which Penn State won. Penn State's team defeated (continued on page eight) Small Diploma Approved By LA Council The Liberal Arts student coun cil approved a resolution calling for a smaller and better grade of diploma last night. Edward Shanken, cour.l,:l pres ident, contrasted for the council diplomas he saw du‘ing a rec€ meeting with President. /v/iiton S. Eisenhower. The council ap proved the smaller size, leather bound diploma over th e lajge type the College now is using. The council also went on rec ord instructing the secretary to send a letter to the state legisla ture supporting the absentee vot ing. A petition to that effect was circulated on campus by the Na tional Student association„reeent ly. Murray Goldman, chairman of the committee working on a fac ulty course rating system, re ported to the council. The system is expected to reveal the quality of instruction, attitude and objec tives of the student, adequacy of the text, and organization of courz'as offered on campus. Reports were also given by the Liberal Arts mixer committee. The mixer will be held tonight at the TUB. Entertainment, dancinl. and ,refreshments are included on the program. A constitutional amendment to limit the offices of president and Secretary-treasurer to junior class members and vice-president to lower classes was shelved for a future meeting . . The newly e,f tablished activities file systery was explained to the council. PRICE FIVE CENTS
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