The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 03, 1954, Image 1

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    Gymnasts :- Place
~~P
VOL. 54, No. 115 SPATE COLLEGE. PA., SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3. 1954 FIVE CENTS
Campaign Renewal
Set for Tomorrow
By Political Parties
After a weekend break from campaigning, Lion and State Par
ties tomorrow night will continue soliciting votes in fraternities and
dormitories.
Lion Party men candidates for All-University • and senior and
junior class offices will resume campaign speeches at approximately
8 p.m. tomorrow in the West
Dormitories. Women candidates
will continue a tentative schedule
in women's dormitories.
Lion Party Schedule
From 'noon to 12:40 p.m. Mon
day Lion Party All-University
candidates will visit Tau Phi Del
ta, Delta Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi
Epsilon, and Phi Sigma Delta;
senior class candidates will visit
Phi Delta Tau, Beta Theta Pi,
Alpha Phi Delta, and Theta Xi;
and junior class candidates will
visit Phi Epsilon Pi, Alpha Gam
ma Rho, Sigma Pi, and Theta
Kappa Phi.
During the evening meal Mon
day Lion Party candidates will
campaign in Simmons, McElwain
and Atherton Balls and the West
Dorm.
Cold, Winds
Are Forecast
For Weekend
If couples complained about the
obscure moon and stars after the
dance last night, because of the
increased cloudiness which the
Meteorology department reported,
they will really have reason to
complain tonight.
A cold front is moving in and
will probably transform the sup
posedly spring -like weather of
April temporarily into a combin
ation of wind and cold apparently
reserved specially for the big
weekend.
At least the cold weather waited
until after the IFC-Panhel Ball
and Ralph Flanagan's arrival.
The weather evidently decided to
have mercy on Penn• . State stu
dents and spared Flanagan's or
chestra, permitting it to play at
the dance. The full dose of un
seasonal weather will set -in to
day and tomorrow.
Professors Represented
By Britton at Convention
Joseph H. Britton, associate pro
fessor of child development and
family relations, is representing
the University chapter of th e
American. Association of Univer
sity Professors at the annual con
vention this weekend in Buffalo,
N.Y.
Administration OKs
WD Separation Plan
The administration yesterday approved the physical separation
plan for Hamilton Hall, according to Dean of Men Frank J. Simes.
Under the plan, submitted by the Dean of Men's office in co
operation with the Department of Housing, Hamilton Hall will be,
divided into seven units. The division will be accomplished by fire
doors to be built across the hallways.
Each unit will house '7O to 80
men. Specifically, the separation
will work as follows:
A and B level will remain as
they are now. A level houses 76
men, B level 98.
First Floor Di;rided
First floor will be divided into
two units, with 80 men in one
unit and 71 in the other. Second
floor will also be divided into two
units, with 85 men in each.
Third and fourth floors will be
considered as one unit, housing a
total of 99 men.
West Dormitory upperclassmen
will be concentrated in Hamilton,
on a basis of four upperclassmen
to six freshmen. The other four
dorms in the West Dorm area will
house freshmen. Upperclassmen
TODAY'S
WEATHER
CLOUDY,
COLDER,
SNOW
Eitt 41IP
Ig\
FOR A BETTER PENN. STATE
Seven women will introduce
Lion Party candidates at frater
nity houses. They are Charlotte
Lutinski, Susan Coskery, Joan
Alfieri, Judith Hance. Virginia
Hance, Miriam J o n es, and Lee
Leaphart.
Lion Party steering committee
and candidates will meet at 2 p.m:
tomorrow in 317 Willard.
Tomorrow night State Party's
All-University candidates will
visit Jordan, Irvin, Watts, Hamil
ton, and McKee Halls. Junior class
nominees will visit the Nittany
dorms tomorrow.
State Nominees to Speak.
At noon Monday, State Party's
All-University and junior class
candidates will speak at Tau Kap
pa Epsilon, Chi Phi, Delta Tau
Delta, and Kappa Delta Rho. Sen
(Continued on page eight)
will be housed in the Nittany-Pol
lock area as in previous years.
The 40-60 ratio will mean that
359 freshmen and 242 upperclass
men will be housed in Hamilton.
The capacity of Hamilton is 601
students. Under the new appor
tionment system, the number of
upperclassmen admitted to the
West Dorms will• remain at 240
students. The only change will be
that all upperclassmen will be
housed in Hamilton Hall.
Single Rooms for Counselors
Under the plan, counselors will
be moved from their present lo
cations into centrally-located sin
gle rooms in each unit. The pre=
sent counselor suites will be
turned over to the students on the
floors, to be used as study loun
ges.
The alternate plan that the ad
ministration had considered was
submitted by the West Dorm
Council. It called for upperclass
men to be housed exclusively in
McKee Hall. According to Otto
E. Mueller, head of the Depart
ment of Housing, this would have
involved raising the quota of Up
perclassmen admitted to the West
Dorms, or admitting freshmen to
McKee, because the capacity of
McKee is 275 men and the present
_quota_ is 240.
Tottrgiatt
Clergyman
To Speak
On Marriage
Louis H. Evans, minister-at
large of- the Board of National
Missions of the Presbyterian
Church, will discuss "Love, Mar
riage, and God" at Chapel serv
ice at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in
Schwab Auditorium.
Chapel choir will sing as in
troit, "Ah, Dearest Jesus" (Crug
er) and as anthem "I Have Longed
for Thy Saving .Health" (Byrd).
George E. Ceiga, Chapel organ
ist will play as prelude "Litania
Solenne," for offertory "Pax ,Vo
bisctim," and for postlude "Bene
dictus" (all by- Edmundson).
Evans, who had been pastor of
the First Presbyterian Church in
Hollywood, Calif., for 12 years,
is - frequent- speaker in colleges
and universities, conventions, and
on radio and television. He is the
recipient of the Tau 'Kappa Al
pha national "Speaker of the
Year 1951 in the Field of Re
ligion" award.
A graduate of Occidental Col
lege, Los Angeles, and McCorm
ick Theological Seminary, Chi
cago, Evans hOlds honorary doc
tor of , divinity, doctor of laws,
and doctor of humane art s de
grees. He is a honorary member
of Rotary International.
As president of the Presby
terian Board of Foreign Missions,
Evans has visited Japan, Korea,
China, India, and Egypt. He has
served on the boards of San
Francisco Theological Seminary,
Western Theological Seminary,
Occidental College, the broad
casting and film commission of
the National Council of Churches,
and the World Alliance of Re
formed ChurcheS.
He is author of "Youth Seeks
a Mast e r," "The Kingdom Is
Yours," and various magazine ar
ticles.
Knodt Resigns
As Dairy Prof
Cloy B. Knodt, professor of
dairy husbandry, has resigned, ef
fective March 31, according to
President Milton S. Eisenhower.
Knodt has accepted a position
as head of the dairy research and
sales program with General Mills,
Inc.
Effective June 30 is the resigna
tion of Kendon R. Smith, associate
professor of psychology. Smith has
been named chairman of the De
partment of Psychology at Wo
man's College of the University of
North Carolina.
Visiting professor of engineer
ing research, Marcel Nicolet, has
resigned effective April 30, to re
turn to Belgium where he heads
the Radiation department at the
Royal Institute of Meteorology.
Seniors to Order
Caps and Gowns
Seniors who exp'eCt to be grad
uated in June may order caps
and gowns at the Atheltic Store.
The schedule is as follows: agri
culture seniors, Monday, Tues
day, and Wednesday; education,
Thursday, Friday, and April 10;
engineering an d architecture,
April 12, 13, and 14; chemistry
and physics and physical educa
tion, April 21, 22, 23; . liberal arts
and. business administration, April
26, 27, and 28; and home eco
nomics and mineral industries,
April 29, and 30 and May 1.
Invitations and announcements
may be ordered at the Student
Union desk in Old. Main on the
same days. The deposit for a• cap
and gown is $5. Seniors should
know their hat sizes when order
ing. Students who will graduate
in military uniforms should not
sign .up for caps and gowns.
out o
Lions Take NCAA Lead
Over Florida St. by 3 Points
Penn State's high-riding gymnasts did a repeat performance
in the preliminary round of yesterday's National Collegiate gym
nastic festival at the University of Illinois by all but clinching their
second consecutive title.
As in last year's tourney, the Nittanies got off to a good start imi
the first-round competition to take
the team lead and send all but
one of their entries in to the final
round.
Nine of the ten Lions entered
will be competing today for na
tional fame in the final round of
the annual gym marathon. Bill
Paxton, State tumbler, failed to
place in the top ten in the qualify
ing round.
A total of 267 individual entries
representing 23 teams from all
corners of the nation have been
entered in the 12th annual gym
nastic marathon. Finals will be
held from 7 to 10 (CST) tonight.
With one event completed—the
all-around—the Lions lead in the
team standings with 20 points.
The Seminoles of Florida State
are right behind with 17 with the
TEAM STANDINGS
PENN STATE 20
Florida State 17
Illinois 8
Michigan 3
Syracuse 2
host team, Illinois, in third posi
tion with 8. Michigan State has
three and the Orange of Syracuse
accounted for two points to round
out the top five.
Following last night's action,
Lion mentor Gene Wettstone sum
med up the tremendous exhibi
tion turned in by his Nittany stal
warts by commenting that they
"performed far mor e superior
than I had anticipated, and if they
continue to do so tomorrow we
should have little trouble in
claiming the national title."
Two of Wettstone's fabulous
gymnasts, amazing Jan Cronstedt,
and versatile Karl Schwenzfeier
each qualified in three events for
today's final round.
(Continued on page six)
2 Students Caught
In sth Speed Trap
Two University students were
among the offenders caught yes
terday in the fifth speed trap run
by State College police since their
drive to end speeding in the bor
ough began last week.
Sixty-five cars were checked
by stop-watches on N. Atherton
street in front of the College
Heights school. Seven arrests
were made.
The students caught are Harlin
Wall, sixth semester architecture
major, and John Shulick, sixth
semester electrical engineering
major.
Reds Learn
Of H-Bomb
LONDON, April 2 (W)—The Russian people were told today
hydrogen bombs, such as those tested by the United States in the
Pacific, can destroy "the fruits of a thousand years of human toil."
Renewed emphasis by the Russians on the destructive nature of
the H-bomb aroused speculation iii Moscow and elsewhere over
improved chances for East-West
agreement on control of nuclear
weapons.
There were these additional de
velopments related to, the H
bomb:
1. Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru of India called for Russia
and the United States to agree on
a standstill pact which would bar
any more' H-bomb explosions.
Nehru said this agreement could
be reached in the UN disarma
ment commission.
2. Britain's top political lead
ers, both Conservative and Labor
sought to quiet growing alarm
over the H-bomb. Foreign Secre
tary Anthony Eden declared the
bomb in some respects could be
an instrument of peace—"an ap
palling warning to anyone who
should contemplate aggression."
The Soviet press approached the
subject Of destructive capabili
ties of the H-bomb by carrying a
resolution of the Communist
sponsored World Peace council in
11111410 k &Waged the U.S.
By RON GATEHOUSE
Scholarship
Recipients
Approved
The University Senate has ap
proved the recipients of the John
W. White medal, John •W. White
fellowship, Evan Pugh medals,
and Phi Kappa Phi freshman
scholarship.
The awards were recommended
by the Senate committee on schol
arships and awards and approved
by President Milt on S. EiSen
hower before ratification by the
Senate Wednesday.
Robert Euwema, eighth semes
ter physics major, received the
medal. The award is a gold medal
presented to a senior, lor outstand
ing scholarship.
Rohrbeck, Rupp Named
Recipients of the John. W.
White fellowship are Charles
Rohrbeck and Richard Rupp,
eighth semester pre-medical ma
jors.,
The $6OO award is presented to
seniors for one year of advanced
study in Graduate School at the
University or at another college.
It is based on scholarship, ability,
and personality.
The Evan Pugh medals are
awarded by the Honor Society
Council to seniors and juniors
who have been selected .for out
standing academic achievements.
Seniors receive gold medals and
juniors receive silver medals.
Recipients of the senior award
are Virginia Bowman, journalism;
Leon Johnson, agronomy• Rich
ard Oswald, electrical engineer
ing; Daniel Pettinato, agronomy; ,
and Robert Hess, aeronautical en
gineering.
Those receiving. the junior
award are William Luyben, chem
ical engineering; James Wolfe,
business administration; David
Overmier, mechanical engineer
ing; Carl McGrew, physics; and
Bruce Schwalm, agricultural en
ginering.
_
The $5O Phi Kappa Phi scholar
ship has been awarded to John
Eastman, second semester chem
istry major.
The award is presented to an
outstanding freshman on the basis
of his first semester's work.
hydrogen bomb tests had gotten
out of control.
The resolution said the peoples
of the world were despairing be
cause "s cie n c e has liberated
bound';® forces which can de
stroy the, fruits of a thousand
years of human toil." The resolu
tion called for immediate agree
ment of the big power s on
banning all kinds of mass anni
hilation weapons.
The significant factor of observ
ers in Moscow was that the Rus
sian people were being told again
of the U.S. tests in the Pacific.
Pravda had only mentioned the
tests once before. There have
been no reports in the Soviet press
of the H-bomb furor in Britain,
and the demands of British Labor
ites for a meeting of Premier
Georgi Malenkov, Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and President
Dwight D. Eisenhower to discuss
control of nuclear weapons.
Malenkov had warned previous
ly that an atomic war could mean
the destruction of civilization.
5 Get Senior Award
Power
Blasts