Lions Surprise 'LS-U, 78-70 6 Wrestlers Enter Eastern Quarter -Finals By SAM PROCOPIO ITHACA, N.Y. In defense of its third consecutive Eastern wrestling championship, Penn State entered six of its eight men into the quarter-finals this after noon here at Barton Hall and kept pace with all contenders, scoring four fall points. Team scoring going into to night's quarter finals beginning at 8 p.m. are as follows: Penn State, Lehigh, and Army, 4 Navy, Cor nell, Pitt, and Syracuse, 3; Prince ton, Franklin and Marshall 2, and Harvard, 1. Temple, which has scored two falls, haS a total of minus eight points because it failed to enter men in the 167 and 177 weight classes. Providing Coach Charlie Spei del with team points were Bob Homan, 123-pound class; Dick Lemyre, 130; Gerry Maurey, 137; and Bill Oberly, heavyweight. Joe Krufka, . 177-pounder, and Doug Frey, 147, won their meets by decision. 01 Battg VOL. 54, No. 99 Parties to Name Army Report Hits Counsel Of McCarthy WASHINGTON, March 12 (IF) —Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R- Wis.) and Army Secretary Rob ert T. Stevens collided again to day as charges and countercharges of pressure, blackmail, and lying exploded around the case of a drafted member of McCarthy's subcommittee staff. What set off the latest spectac ular flare-up within and around the McCarthy subcommittee was an Army report accusing the Wis consin senator and his chief coun sel, Roy Cohn, of turning on pres sure for favored treatment for Pvt. David G. Schine. Schine is Cohn's pal and was a consultant to the McCarthy com mittee until the was drafted into the Army last November. McCarthy bitterly protested that the report was an attempt at "blackmail." Just as bitterly, Stevens protested McCarthy's re lease of an unsigned memoran dum the senator said was from committee files—a memo that said Stevens had asked that the sub committee shift its hunt for Reds from the Army to the Air Force, Navy, and. Defense department. The Army report at the heart of the newest clash said Cohn told Stevens he ' would be "through" and the Army "wreck ed" if Schine was sent overseas. It said McCarthy repeatedly ask ed that he be assigned to the New York area, where he could assist the subcommittee on the side. At the McCarthy news confer ence, Cohn sat pale and solemn beside the Wisconsin senator. McCarthy said he had no in tention of firing Cohn. WARM 14:16 42 4' 'CLOUDY 0., # TODAY'S WEATHER Penn State, defending East ern wrestling champions, took an early one point lead in the quarter-final round of the East ern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association tournament at Bar ton Hall, Ithaca, N.Y., last night. The Lion matmen scored three falls, and advanced five men into the semi-finals to be played this afternoon. The field of contenders battling for the Eastern mat crown has dwin dled to Pittsburgh, Penn State. And Lehigh commanding top attention. Quarter-final EIWA Results 123-lbs. Bo b McCreary (Temple). decisioned Bob Ho rrian (PS), 12-0. - 130-lbs. Dick Lemyre (PS) decisioned Dave Kline, (Penn). 6-Q. 137-lbs. Maurey (PS) pin ned Randall (Army) at 4:15 with a reverse nelson and crotch. 147-lbs. Frey (PS) decision ed Mulligan (Rutgers), 4-2. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 13, 1954 Lion, State Cliques To Meet Tomorrow Candidates for All-University, and senior and junior class offices will be elected at 7 p.m. tomorrow night at the final clique meetings of Lion and State parties. Lion Party will meet in 121 Sparks. State Party will meet in 10 Sparks. Students must pick up clique membership cards, Edwin Kohn, elections committee chairman, said yesterday. Kohn said no student. would be given a clique card on recognition alone. The matriculation card must be presented, he said. Clique cards may be picked up at tables in either the ground or first floor lobbies of Sparks, de pending on where the clique is meeting. Cliques File Lists Both cliques have filed a com plete membership list with the elections committee. The lists con tain the name of every clique member who has attended two meetings and the name of every student who has attended one meeting. Kohn said 408 names were on the Lion Party list and 210 on the State Party list. According to the spring election code, a student must attend two of three clique meetings to be eligible to vote in the final clique elections. This means that stu dents must have attended at least one previous clique meeting to be eligible to vote tomorrow night. The spring All-University elec tions will be held April 7 and 8. Arnelle, Smoot Nominated Jesse Arnelle, junior class vice president, and Robert Smoot, cam pus National Student Association coordinator, • were nominated by Lion party last week for All-Uni versity president. Benjamin Sinclair, Lion Party clique chairman, said yesterday that it wasn't know if Arnelle would return from the basketball road trip in time to address the clique again tomorrow. Arnelle gave an acceptance speech last week. Smoot will speak tomorrow, Sinclair said. State Party nominated Lewis Wade, secretary-treasurer of the Mineral Industries Student Coun cil, last week for All-University president. There were no other nominations for president. Donovan Nominated Lion Party nominated Jerry Donovan, sixth semester labor management relations major, for All-University secretary-treasurer. There were no other Lion Party (Contin.ue4 on. page eight) 177-lbs. Krufka (PS) pinned Nicholson (Army) at 4:17 with a body press. Hvt. Oberly (PS)' pinned Littlefield (Columbia) at 3:30 with a reverse nelson and body press. Eastern Preliminary Summary 123-lbs. Homan (PS) pin ned Anderson (Syracuse), 2:53 of second period. 130-lbs. Lemyre (PS) pin ned Yatsu, (Brown), 1:16 of first period. 137-lbs. Maurey (PS) pin ned Ray (Harvard), 2:02 of first period. 147-lbs. rrey (PS) decision ed Mental°, (Army), 4-11 - . 157-lbs. -- Noe (Penn) deci sioned Shawley (PS), 12-9. 167-lbs. Solomon (Pitt) de cisioned Humphreys, (PS), 6-1. 177-lbs. ICrufka (PS) deci sioned •Rowland (Brown), 6-0. Hvt. Oberly (PS) pinned Ride (Rutgers), 2:31 of first period. resent matriculation cards tomorrow night to library Exhibits Folger Editions On display in the University Library until March •23 is the traveling Shakespeare exhibit of the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C. The collection, the first travel ing exhibit of Shakespeare, in cludes a copy of each of the Folio editions of the dramatic works, two Quarto editions of single plays, and a number of prints, facsimilies, and reprints pub lished by the Folger Shakespeare Library. The prints illustrate the life and times of Shakespeare, and the Elizabethan stage. The exhibit, which was accepted in 1932 by President Herbert Hoo ver as a gift of Henry Clay Folger to the American people, is in tended to acquaint the public with Shakespearean, literature. Coeds to Decide on Ele ti n issue A decision to release. the Wo men's Student Government Asso ciation's final electiOn figures was again postponed yesterday when Senate unanimously agreed to take a vote among women stu dents. Women may vote on the issue at the primary elections Tuesday. Final elections will be Thursday. The vote is a compromise mea sure taken when Mary E. Brewer, assistant to the Dean of Women, said Senate was not legally able to release the figures in view of a vote taken in 1951. When a proposal to release the figures was being considered in November 1951, womerr voted at house meetings that they did not wish to have the results released. Eighty-five per cent of the women students voted. Two-thirds of those voting opposed releasing the figures. Because of the results of this vote and because women may see (cattr i lia a. Although Pitt, tourney favorite. trailed the Lions with three points. the Panthers advanced a full team, eight men, into the quarter finals. Nevertheless, there is a possibility that three of these will be eliminated in the quarter finals. Homan, with less than ten sec onds left in the first period, took his opponent. Dick Anderson of Syracuse, down for two points. Homan scored an escape point in the second period and then from a standing position secured a dou ble arm lock and tripped Ander son to the mat for the fall. The time was 5:53. Adding another point to the Penn State total, Lemyre pinned Frank Yatsu. of Brown with a three-quarter nelson and body press at 1:16 of the bout. Lemyre had a quick takedown and found little trouble in making Yatsu ob serve the Barton Hall lights. In the 137-pound-bout Maurey tok down Tom Ray. Harvard, in (Continued on page seven) Slates Student Fined, Then Fined Again; He Fumes "Ignorance of the law is not blissful—but blistered!" Those are the words of Capt. Philip A. Mark, head of the Cam pus Patrol. He cited a case to prove his point. A student, given a ticket for a parking violation, decided to drive to the patrol office to pay his fine. He drove down Pollock road during class hours. He was stopped by Mark and given an other ticket for a traffic viola tion. Total in fines: $5. The stu dent? Blistering. Three other students were given tickets yesterday for driving on Pollock road between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. This brings to 38 the number of tickets given since a traf f i c violation crackdown started four days ago. But students are striking back. Two days ago a sign flapped in the wind, hanging on a tree on Pollock road near Mac Allister Hall. Declared the 24 by 18 inch poster in bright red and blue let ters: "Campus Pa tr o l Purge Ahead." Yesterday the sign hung on the wall of the office of James W. Dean, assistant to the dean of men in charge of independent affairs. the results in the Dean of Wo men's office, 105 Old Main, WSGA tabled the proposal to release the figures. Miss Brewer said whether the figures are published is immater ial, but Senate cannot act against a vote taken of the students. She said the women should be able to vote again. According to the motion passed unanimously by Senate, if the vote shows that women wish the final election figures released, WSGA will release them. The primary election figures will not be re leased. Patricia Ellis, senior senator, said the attitude expressed by the vote taken in 1951 was practically the result of the fact that the pro posal was presented in a negative manner. Miss Ellis said at that time WSGA opposed releasing the figures and presented the proposal negatively. When the vote is taken Tues day, women 'will be given a mim- Arnelle Tops Nittanies in Tourney Win An unranked Penn State basketball team, defying the experts who shunned them as contenders in the NCAA cage eliminations, battled from be hind for the second night in succession last night to whip Louisiana State, 78-70, at lowa City. The win moves the up rising Lions into the finals of the Eastern Regional Playoffs to n; alit. Penn State and Notre Dame will meet tonight in the NCAA. Eastern Regional finals at lowa City. The Irish upset powerful Indiana last night, 65-64, to earn the right to play in the finals. The game will begin at 10 p.m. EST. Led by center Jesse Amen% the Nittanies, trailing by ten points at one time in the second quarter battered back in the final seconds of the first half to move ahead 34-32. Then they went on to win it in a topsy-turvey second half battle. Arnelle fired in 24 points and did a terific rebounding job as he and his Penn State teammates pulled what could be the greatest upset in Penn State history. Even a 34-point scoring spree by All- American Bob Pettit wasn't enough to stop the fired-up Nit tanies as they tallied 29 field goals and 20 foul points while their (Continued on page seven) FIVE CENTS Schott to See Prexy Tuesday •n Social Code Interfraternity Council Presi dent Thomas Schott will meet with President Milton S. Eisen hower at p.m. Tuesday to dis cuss the new drinking and dating policy recently adopted by the University Senate. Schott will attend the meeting with the President and Wilmer E. Kenworthy, director of student of affairs, as a representative of the presidents of the University fraternities. They asked that he discuss possible changes and get the administration's interpreta tions of several sections of the code: The fraternity presidents took the action at a midnight meeting on Wednesday. They expressed satisfaction at the new version of Senate rules W-4 and W-5 which restate the University's attitude toward drinking; making the fra ternities responsible for their own actions. Major objections were voiced against sections of the regulations requiring extensive use of chap erons and the time limits on en tertaining women in the houses. eographed statement concerning the arguments for and against re leasing the figures. Before the WSGA proposal was tabled in 1951, a proposed amend ment to the All-University consti tution requiring all organizations rep r e sented on All-University Cabinet to release results of any public elections was tabled. Collegian Tomorrow The Daily Collegian will publish a special four-p ag e sports extra tomorrow morn ing. The special issue will carry final results of the Eastern In tercollegiate Wrestling Associ ation match at Ithaca, N.Y.; Intercollegiate Boxing Associ ation Eastern tournament fi nals at Charlottesville, Va.; Eastern Intercollegiate Gym nastic Association meet in Philadelphia, and tonights NC AA basketball game. By DICK McDOWELL