The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 14, 1952, Image 1

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    Political Groups
Get Go-Ahead
See Page 4
VOL. 52 No. 106
Liett'•. - cogers ACcept NCAA - Bid
Coed Critical After
N.Y. State Car Crash
SYRACUSE, N.Y., March 13 Rhea White, 20, a fifth -semes
ter student in Arts and Letters at Penn State was seriously injured
in.an automobile crash with a tractor-trailer truck 10 miles south
of here about 3:15 this , afternoon. Her condition is listed as critical.
Stuart Stevens, 20 ; a junior in
Liberal Arts and a member of
Acacia at Syracuse University
was killed in the accident.
Listed as "Critical"
According to Dr. Marcus Rich
ards, coroner's physician at Laf
ayette, N.Y., Miss White suffered
.a cerebral concussion, possible
skull fracture and a shoulder frac
ture.
A report from the Crouse Irving
hospital - hde, where Miss White
was taken after the accident. re
ported her in "critical condition."
No diagnosis by hospital author-
Rhea White
ities was available late tonight.
(The Associated Piess late .tonight
reported that the hospital declined
to 'reveal Miss White's condition.)
According to New- York State
Trooper Richard Hal e y, Miss
White's car, driven .at the time
by Stevens, was coming south
(toward State College) on Route
11, 1 1 / 2 miles south of Lafayette.
N.Y.
Bringing Stevens to Danie
According to Haley, the car
skidded and
,went into a - spin
during a snowstorm. The tractor
trailer truck, driven by Leo Clark,
29, Tunkhannock, Pa.. coming -in
the opposite direction, tried -to
stop, and also_ went into a spin,
pushing the car into a tree. The
truck was loaded with 14 tons of
coal.
Miss White from Clinton, N.Y.,
according to members of Phi Mu
sorority at Penn State, had driven
(Continued on page eight)
Lions Open . Defense *of Mat Crown
By JAKE HIGHTON
Penn State's unbeaten wrest-
ling team opens defense of its
1951 East ern Intercollegiate
~championship at 1 tcday in the
preliminary round of the 48th
annual EIWA renewal. All mat
ches in the two-day tournament
will take place in Lehigh,Univer
sity's Grace Hall, Bethlehem:
Coach Charlie Speidel's Lions,
undefeated during the .past two
dual seasons, and with:a mark of
TODAY'S
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(Special to the Daily, Collegian)
6 Chapel
Fund Uses
Suggested
Six proposals for the use of the
Chapel offering after June 30
were discussed by a committee of
18 students, faculty and s,t af f
members yesterday afternoon.
Three of the six proposals were
patterned on the precedent of in
ternational contact set by the
Penn' State-in-China project. 'For
the past 40 years the Chapel offer
ing has been contributed toward
work at Lingnan University, Can
ton, China. Since the communists
refuse to allow the money to en
ter the country, the project is
being abandoned.
One of the three projects would
contribute the offering to ward
Allahabad Agricultural Institute,
the Christian college of rural life
for India founded by Samuel Hig
ginbottom about 1910.
Another suggestion is that the
money be contributed to Silliman
University, in the Phillippine Is
lands, ' to be" used in its general
educational program or in a spe
cial agricultural mission project.
Boyd Bell, who is in charge of the
project, and Dr. Arthur L. Car
son, president of Silliman Uni
versity, are both alumni of the
College.
The third suggestion with a
view to maintaining international
contact was that the money
should be contributed to the
World Student Service Fund, ei
ther as a general contribution or
for some specific project, such as
the Punjab Camp College of the
University of Delhi.
Three of
,the suggestions were
for local projects. One was the
building of an International House
or center at the College.
A fifth suggestion was the build
' ' (Continued on page eight)
20 straight victories, are the favo r
rites to repeat their championship
victory in Rec Hall last year.
Chief competition to the Lions
among the 16-team, 128-man field
will come from Lehigh, runnerup
to the Lions a year ago, Army,
Syracuse and Cornell. As the only
undefeated school in the tourney,
State has defeated all four of the
teams in dual competition this
year.
Six Former Champs
:• Other competing
,colleges are•
Rutgers, Columbia, Ya 1 e , Har
vard, Princeton, Brown, Franklin
& Marshall, Navy, Penn, Temple
and -Virginia.
The meet is . so loaded " down
with former champions six .of
them—and' outstanding contend
ers that individual champions are
likely to be.' distributed among as
many as seven or eight teams.
In the second and third place
bracketS, which will undoubtedly
provide the •winner's bulge, State
has the edge in, that it owns four
or five men with the.potential on
season record-to reach the finals.
Grace Hall -will :house- a: two-
'FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY. MORNING, MARCH 14, 1952
'Congressmen' Register
—Photo by Lenz
DELEGATES to the 17th annual hate debate convention register
for the two-day "model congress" while Penn State hosts look on.
Signing list is William Klisanin; looking on are James Manderino,
St. Vincent's College; C. W. Fink, Dickinson College debate. coach;
Donald Shapiro, Dickinson: Jay Headly, convention secretary;
Joan Dobson, and Clair George, convention manager.
Debaters to Pass
Mock Legislation
Delegates to the 17th annual Pennsylvania State Debaters' Con
vention will settle down to the work of congressmen today as they
go into committees to work toward the passage of mock bills.
More than 100 debaters
. from 17 Pennsylvania colleges who
convene at 10 a.m. today in 121
arrived on campuS yesterday will
Sparks, where they will be. wel
comed by Dr. Robert T. Oliver,
head of the Department of
Speech.
They will then divide into three
committees, which will spend the
day working on bills and prepar
ing reports on their topics.
The committee on raising 'pub-
lic and private moral standards
will discuss causes of cheating on
examinations, basketball fixes,
and cheating the government for
personal gain, and attempt to
find the best method for solving
the problem of low standards.
Two committees wi 11 discuss
the question, "What is the best
(Continued on pag• eight)
ring wrestling circus this after
noon with 64 bouts scheduled for
two mats to be used simultan
eously. The 64 winners will ad
vance to the quarter-finals at 8
tonight.
Penn State Entrants
123—80 b Homan (8-1)
130—Dick Lemyre (9-0)
137—Jerry Maurey (5-0)
147—Don Frey (6-1)
157—Doug Frey (6-2)
167—Joe Lemyre (6-2-1)
177—Hud Samson (7-2)
Hwi—Lynn Illingworth 16-1)
The 32 survivors clash in the
semi-final's at 2 p.m. t b m o r r o w
leaving 16 to battle for the cham
pionships at 8 p.m. tomorrow.
, Six former champions headline
a formidable array of wrestling
talent. Two of them, Lehigh's
George Feuerbach and Rutger's
Emil Perona, are aiming for a tri
ple crown which has been won by
only 10 wrestlers in. EIWA his
tory.
(Continued on pfge six).
rgiatt
Fraternities
Hear Joint
Buying Plan
By TED SOENS
With Patrick Boner, of the Eco
nomics and Commerce Depart
ment acting as chairman .pro tern,
the first plans for a joint buying
program were introduced to some
40 fraternity house members last
night at a meeting of the Associa
tion of Fraternity Counselors and
Fraternity Management Associa
tion.
This plan is an attempt to copy
a highly successful buying - plan
that has been in effect at Ohio
State University for 20 years.
The plan, if accepted by the
fraternities, would save money
for the houses and thus cut down
the house bills. This program was
started three years ago and has
met with a lot of opposition. The
opposition has asserted that the
plan was on too large a scale.
In view of this, Boner said that
the fraternities could have a trial
item, such a• potatoes, which they
could buy on a two to four week
plan. A set price would be agreed
upon at the beginning. The pota
toes would then be bought in a
large group and thus save money,
for the fraternities.
`Hedda Gabler'
Henrik Ibsep's drama of a
maladjusted woman, "Hedda
Gabler," opens its' third week
cod at Center Stage tonight.
Tickets are available at ..the
Student Union desk in Old
Main. They are 90 cents for
tonight and $1.25 for tomorrow
night's ,-performance, ' .
Ike-Kefauver
Race Is Jollr
See Page 4
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Raleigh Site
Of State's
First Battle
Penn State yesterday accepted
an invitation to•the National Col
legiate Athletic Association bas
ketball tournament.
Harold R. Gilbert, graduate
manager 'of athletics, announced
the acceptance early last night.
Besides • Penn State—Dayton,
Duquesne and St. Johns received
at-large invitations to the tourna
ment to complete the selection of
the eastern teams. Penn State will
play at Raleigh, North Carolina,
March 21-22 along with St. Johns,
Kentucky and North Carolina
State. The Lions will play .either
Kentucky or North Carolina State.
Conference Winners
Kentucky is the winner of the
Southeastern Conference; North
Carolina State won the Southern
Conference title.
Duquesne and Dayton will com
pete with Illinois; Big Ten champ-
Elmer Gross
ion, and Princeton,. Ivy League
champ ,at Chicago. The two win
ners from each city, Raleigh and
Chicago, will play the western
winners in the championship
round at the University of Wash
ington in Seattle.
The two western regional tour
naments will be held in Kansas
City and Corvallis, Ore. At Kan
sas City, the University of Kan
sas, Big Seven; Texas Christian,
Southwest Conference; New Mexi
co A & M, Border Conference;
and St. Louis University, Mis
souri Valley Conference, will
compete. •
Committee Accepts
At Corvallis, UCLA, Pacific
Coast Conference; University of
Wyoming, Skyline Conference;
and • Santa Clara and Oklahoma
City University, at-large teams,
will compete.
- The decision to accept the bid
was made by the Senate Com
mittee on Athletics after Coach
Elmer Gross and the team had
voted to accept.
The committee previously had
turned down a _ "feeler" to play
in the National Invitation Tour
nament, now being played in New
York.
Gross had the Lions, who fin
(Continued on page seven)
Lions to Hold
Party at KDR
A cabaret-style party will be
sponsored by the Lion Party from
8 p.m. to 12 midnight tomorrow at
Kappa Delta Rho fraternity.
A small combo will provide
music for dancing and a variety
of cabaret games, including dart
throwing and ping pong, will be
available.
The affair, which is open to the
public, has been arranged by John
Haines, chairman of the party
committee;'. Thomas Kidd, and
Charles Obertanee..