The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 24, 1953, Image 1

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VOL. 54, No. 49
4-Day Vacation
To Begin Noon
Tomorrow
Thanksgiving vacation for the
University students begins at
11:50 a.m. tomorrow and ends
,8 a.m. Monday.
The dormitories will close at
5 p.rfi. tomorrow and will reopen
1 p.m. Sunday. Lunch will be the
last meal served tomorrow in
the dormitories. The first meal
to be served after vacation is the
Sunday might meal at regular
hours..
All offices at the University
will be closed Thursday, Thanks
giving Day. Offices will be open
Friday and Saturday of the vaca
,, tion.
v The Pattee Library will be
closed all day Thursday and Sun
day. It will be open tomorrow,
7:50 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday, 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. and Saturday, 9 a.m.
until noon.
The Student Dry Cleaning
Agency will be open tonight in
all the dorms at usual hours and
will reopen after vacation on
Monday night.
Today’s issue of the Daily Col
legian is the last before vacation.
Publication will resume Tuesday,
Dec. 1.
The Penn State Book Exchange,
school supply store, will close at
noon tomorrow and open at 8:30
a.m. Monday. ,
Students heading eastward will
be greeted by temperatures in
the fifties ; and cloudy weather,
the Associated. Press yesterday
predicted. Considerable cloudi
ness was predicted for western
Pennsylvania.
Harrier
Kansas
Penn. State’s hill-and-dalers closed the books on another season yesterday when they
finished fourth in the 15th annual running of the NCAA four-jnile title, xace : at East Lansing,
Mich.
Captain Red Hollen placed sixth for the Lions and'Lamont Smith came in 13th. Wes
Santee paced Kansas to the team championship by taking the individual crown. Santee’s
winning time of 19:43.5 was. just seven seconds off the record for the race. Hollen finished at
20:16 and Smith.at 20:31. ' ' 1
v Indiana finished in the No. 2 slot for the second straight year. The Hoosiefs tallied 82
points and/Millard “Bill” Easton’s new titlists were charged with only. 70. Chick Werner’s
21 Senior Men
Are Honored
By Air ROTC
Twenty-one seniors in the. Ad
vanced Air Force Reserve Offi
cers’ Training Corps have been
selected as distinguished students
of the Class of 1954 Air Force
ROTC program.
Certificates of award and bad
ges will be presented to Thomas
Ahearn, Frank Chiappetta, Wil
liam Collins, Rudolph Dutzman,
Edgar Fehnel, David Fishburn,
Douglas Frey, Sidney Gass, Clif
ford Grine, Robert Hess, Arthur
■Hussey, William Johnson, David
Jones, Daniel Loucks, " Emmert
McGarry, M i c h a e 1 Popowniak,
Clark Sell, Melvin Shira, Richard
Smedley, Byran Troutman,' and
Ronald Wint.
The cadets have been chosen On
the basis of all-University aver
age, AFROTC average, and by
recommendation. of the deans of
their schools, the heads of their
departments,, and by professors
of Air Science and Tactics.
LaVie Photo Times
Set for 5 Groups
: Pictures for LaVie will be
taken of the following-organi
zations on Dec. 1 at the Penn
Slate Photo Shop: Players,
6:30 p.m.; Thespians, 6:50; La-
Vie, 7:10; Education Student
Council, 7:30; and' Collegian,
7:50. ■
Greyhound Bus Walkout
Threatened for Midnight
lofhing
photo by. Shaw
FRANK DERK AND TIM EASTLAND, co-chairman of the Phi
Kappa Psi-Chi Omega clothing drive, survey • the five tons of
clothing and bedding stored in the Phi Kappa Psi basement. The
Kofman Trucking Co., Bellefonie, will take the clothing to New
York, Nov. 30 for shipment to Korea.'
Squad Places Fourth;
Wins in NCAA Meet
By HERM WEISKOPF
harriers had 97 points. Syracuse
was third with 94 points, Pitts
burgh came in fifth with 104,. and
Michigan State was sixth with
125. The Spartans were the de
fending champs.
Moorhead Is 30ih
Doug Moorhead, standout soph
omore for the Blue and White,
placed 30th with a clocking of
20:57. Jim Hamill, 21:11, was 49th;
Ted Garrett, 21:19, finished 53rd;
Jim McKelvey, 22:29, placed 80th;
and John Chillrud, 22:42, was
84th for the Lions.
(Continued on page eight)
Italy OK's Big-5
ROME, Nov. 23 (#>)—A gov
ernment spokesman said flatly
today that Italy has given the
green light to a five-power
conference which would seek a
solution of the thorny Trieste
problem.
The statement was made by
a Foreign Office spokesman in
clarifying Sunday’s official an
nouncement that Italy takes a
“positive and constructive at
titude” toward such a confer
ence. This had been interpreted
as only qualified acceptance of
the idea.
Italy Accepts Proposal
In Washington, Western dip
lomats said that Italy’s agree
ment to a conference in the
near future apparently was due
to acceptance by Rome of a
U.S.-British - French proposal
that Italian officials be named
to study what their administra
STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 24, 1953
or Korea
Final LA Photographs
Wil! Be taken Today
Today is the deadline for Lib
eral Arts seniors whose last names
begin with N through Z to have
LaVie pictures taken. Proofs must
be returned within three days af
ter the pictures have been taken.
If the pictures are not returned
within this time limit, the LaVie
staff will select the picture which
will appear in the yearbook.
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
tive duties would be if and
when Allied-occupied Zone A
of Trieste Free Territory is
turned over to Italy.
The U.S. State Department
declined officially to comment
on whether Italy’s attitude to
ward the proposed conference
as clarified by the foreign of
fice spokesman constitutes un
qualified acceptance of the
idea. Diplomats here and in
London also reserved comment.
No Comment
Premier Guiseppe Pella was
on a train bound for diplomat
ic meetings at The Hague, The
Netherlands, and was not avail
able for comment.
The Italian spokesman’s out
line of Italy’s position, plus the
reports from Washington,
would indicate a major com
promise on Italy’s part. Modi
fication of the previous insis
tence on full occupation of
Zone. A could precipitate a pol-
wjtatt
Several
Would
Bus travel throughout the state is expected to be severely ham
pered if 2000 drivers and maintenance employees of the Pennsyl
vania Greyhound Bus Lines go through with their walkout tenta
tively set for midnight tonight.
Included among those affected will be-several hundred students
at the University who have made
plans to journey home for Thanks
giving by Greyhound,
Wilmer E. Kenworthy, director
of student affairs, reported last
night that no plans had been made
for beginning the Thanksgiving
vacation a day early because of
the strike. He said he felt it was
“a personal problem for a small
number of students.”
Small Number Affected
School would not be dismissed
earlier, he explained, because “of
the small percentage of the stu
dents affected and the other means
BULLETIN
As of 9:20 last night. Ken
worthy told a Daily Collegian
reporter classes were still
scheduled for Wednesday morn
ing despite the planned Grey
hound bus strike.
CLEVELAND, Nov. 23 (IP)—
Pennsylvania Greyhound's 2000
AFL union drivers have noti
fied the company ihey intend
to strike Tuesday at midnight.
of transportation available.” Most
students, he felt, could find their
way home by train, car, or an
other bus line.
The only answer, he said, would
be excused absenses from class
for those who could make no
other transportation arrange
ments. He said, however, at the
present time he had no authority
to set up such a program.
AIT bus reservations for to
morrow have been canceled by
Greyhound, and five special ex
press; charter buses will not run.
Officials reported that refunds -
would be given to students any- •
time at the local post house.
Dl' W. _ Maxey, local manager,
and ■ Philip Shoemaker, ticket
agent, said they have been urg
ing students to leave today in
order to make sure they will not
be stranded in State College.
Maxey. said in all probability, the
strike will go through and pros
pects for a quick settlement look
“grim.”
-He said Edwards Lines would
continue their regular rims and
will try to handle as many stu
dents as possible. Also, the strike
will not effect the Boalsburg Bus
Co. which connects State College
with trains in Lewistown, he said.
(Continued on page eight )
Conference
itical crisis here unless the
rightist deputies stick with the
center parties. A furious out
cry by the Communists and
pro-Communists is almost cer
tain, political circles said.
Italy Accepts "in Toio"
The Foreign Office spokes
man said Italy-had accepted the
three-power proposals “in to
to.” Spelling it out, he said
“that means that insofar as It
aly is concerned, there is a
green light for the five-power
conference.”
Yugoslavia’s general reaction
to the conference proposal is
one of acceptance provided
there is no previous change in
the status quo at Trieste. There
has been no indication from
Belgrade whether any plan for
placing Italian officials in a
training status for any future
administrative duties in. Tri
este would satisfy Yugoslavia’s
stipulation.
Hundred Students
Be Without Rides
By DIEHL McKALIP
Review Set
For 3 Cases
Of Discipline
Three cases of student discipline
will ,be reviewed by the Senate
Committee on Student Affairs
subcommittee on discipline today.
Dean of Men Frank J. Simes re
ported that the committee would
meet to act on the recommenda
tion of Tribunal that a second se
mester pre-med major be given a
deferred suspension from the uni
versity.
The student had been found
guilty of underage drinking, con
duct detrimental to the good name
of the University,'and negligence
in the responsibility for the con
duct of his.date. The girl-had-been
found unconscious from drinking,
following the Junior Prom Nov.
6. She had been reported to have
been found in the snow.
Deferred suspension means that
a student is suspended from the
University at the end of the cur
rent semester. He may be allowed
to return if sufficient reason is
given' to -the Dean of Men.
Investigation of this case by the
Dean of Men’s office and the In
terfraternity Council board Of
control led to the suspension of
social privileges of Theta Xi fra
ternity for serving alcoholic bev
erages and permitting a freshman
woman to attend an unchaperon
ed social function, a violation of
the IFC unchaperoned dating
code.
The case of the student who
provided the alcoholic beverages
to the fraternity will also be re
viewed by the committee.
The third disciplinary case will
involve a first semester freshman
from the Nittany Dorm area who
was caught tampering with a fire
extinguisher.. The infraction was
cited as a violation of both state
and federal laws.
Today ...
lip
;
jggfV J
The Nittany Lion Roars
A ■ throaty roar of congratula
tions to the 1953 gridiron contin
gent for its 17-0 whitewash of the
Pitt Panthers.
The Lions, who went into the
traditional game as underdogs,
emerged - unquestionable victors
to complete a successful season.
The “Coal Scuttle”—at stake Sat
urday—remains at State.
The. Lion congratulates as well
the students whose conduct was
as noteworthy as the football
team’s performance.
Health
Service-
See Page 4
FIVE CENTS