The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 09, 1955, Image 1

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    Bulgnin
Replaces
Malenkov
MOSCOW, Feb. 8 (JP)—De
fense Minister Nicolai Bul
ganin, an army marshal, re
placed Georg' M. Malenkov as
premier of the Soviet Union
today. The change was cou
pled with a statement of foreign
policy criticizing the United States
as an aggressor, upholding Com
munist China's claims to Formosa
and presenting a picture of pos
sible hydrogen bomb warfare
which communism alone would
survive.
While Bulganin became pre.
mier, the drama that unfolded be.
fore the Supreme
Soviet turn(
spotlight of
kita S. Kh
chev, head _
Soviet Comm
Ist party. It
strongly imi
scored S o
concentratit
heavy in 4
arms prod
for which '1
shchev has
the chief
cate.
Malenkov resigned at a ,morning
session of the Parliament, confess
ing himself a failure in the field
of _agriculture and an inexper
ienced hand in the affairs of gov
ernment.
Bulganin was nominated for the
premiership at the afternoon ses
sion by Khrushchev, who received
a significant standing ovation.
Shortly thereafter Foreign Minis
ter V. M. Molotov went to the
rostrum in the great Kremlin Pal
ace, and while diplomats listened
in the packed and tense galleries,
grimly outlined the Soviet idea
of what would come from a hy
drogen-bomb war.
Molotov declared the Soviet
Union has developed hydrogen
bombs with "such success that the
United States could appear back
ward."
He said a comparison of the
true strength of the United States
and the Soviet Union would show
this nation is not he weaker par
ty. He declared the Soviet Union
wants to compete with the United
States in atomic matters only "in
using " atomic energy for peaceful
aims.
Ile warned:
"In. case of eventual war, world
civilization will not perish but
what will be destroyed is the rote
ten social system with its blood
saturated imperialism which is
being rejected by oppressed peo
ples.'
In. view ,of the tenor , of Molo
(Continued on page eight)
Plans Approved
For Parking Area
Plans have been approves' for
enlarging parking area 23, north
of the Temporary' Building, to ac
commodate 77 more• cars. Work
on the addition will not be started
until awing.
A =dared area is being rv
vided for vehicles in the vicinity
of the Ice skating rink.
Work has started on the con
struction of a parking area be
hind Woman's Building. The new
parking area will accommodate
36 cars.
Enrollment Totals 11,325
Enrollment on campus for the
spring semester reached 11.325
yesterday. C. 0. Williams, dean
of admissions and registrar. has
reported.
This figure, although not com
plete. is already larger than the
final. enrollment figure of a
year ago when 11,014 were reg
istered for the spring semester.
VOL. 55. No. 77
Off
Goy. George M. Leader Adzn. Lewis L. Strauss
Will participate in University's birthday celebration .
Maleskirr
Aspaturian Foresees
Soviet Dictatorship
The sudden resignation of Georgi Malenkov as Russian
premier signifies the breakdown of collective rule and the
resurrection of one-man dictatorship in Russia, Vernon V. As
paturian, assistant professor of political science, told The
Daily Collegian last night.
In commenting on Malenkov's
resignation and his replacement
by Marshall Nikolai Bulganin,
Aspaturian stated that the "real
power is not Bulganin, the new
f , r (ys e s inier, but Communist party
Nikita S. Khrushchev whose
records indicate that he is mak
ing the supreme bid for absolute
power."
When Malenkov resigned at a
joint session of the Supreme So
viet Parliament; 1.1 onfessmg failure
through inexperience, Khrushchev
immediately nominated Bulganin
as premier, and he got the post
by acclamation.
"It was Khrushchev who ful
filled Bulganin's appointment
and was probably the man behind
the arrest and execution of secret
chief Beria," Aspaturian revealed.
'Aspaturian is a specialist in So
viet affairs. He teaches Soviet for
eign policy. He was recalled to
active duty during the Korean
War as chief of the Russian desk
at the Intqlligence Division of the
Psychological Warfare Section of
the. UN and U.S. headquarters in
Tokyo. His job was to evaluate
Communist techniques and poli
cies and to give advice to UN
(Continued on page eight)
Television Teaching Gets Underway;
580 Students Schedule.. TV Courses
Teaching by ' television at
the University got underway
on schedule with the begin
ning of the spring semester
Monday.
One section of psychology 2 and
two sections of chemistry 2 are
being taught by television as part
of a study to attempt to solve
the problems which will be cre
ated with the expected increase
in college enrollment within the
next few years.
Approximately 330 s t u d ents
registered for the psychology
course and approximately 250
registered for the chemistry
course.
Both Dr. W. Conrad Fernelius,
head of the department of chem
istry, and Dr. Clarence R. Car-
al i t Bang 0 Toll
By ROG BEIDLER
Student Enthusiasm
STATE COLLEGE. PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 9, 1955
als to Attend Party
Two Students
Leave Hospital
Two students who received in
juries in an accident when their
auto skidded on a road near the
Centre County Hospital Sunday
were released from the hospital
Monday.
Police said the students, Robert
Shrope, fourth semester chemical
engineering major, and William
Fabis, second semester business
education major, were going south
from Bellefonte when their car
skidded and hit a utility pole to
the left of the road.
Shrope, driver of the car, suf
fered lacerations of the upper lip
and the right side of his face.
Fabis received small lacerations
of the face and forehead and
brush burns of the body.
The car was believed damaged
beyond repair.
Home Ec Conclave
The College of Home Econom
ics will hold a convocation at 4:30
p.m. today in Schwab Auditorium.
penter reported high student en
thusiasm for the project.
No actual teaching by television
has been done as yet. The first
class period was spent assigning
students to the various rooms.
Classes with the use of television
will get underway today in both
chemistry and psychology.
Students Divided
Students have been divided into
three groups: One group watches
the lecture in the room from
which it is being televised, an-
other gro u p watches in other
rooms over television receivers,
and a third group attends ,classes
taught without the use of televi
sion. At the time they registered,
students did not know into which
group they would be placed.
Classes are televised from two
rooms: psychology classes+from 10
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
Leader, Strauss to Attend
Centennial Ceremonies
Gov. George M. Leader and Admiral Lewis Strauss of the
Atomic Energy Commission have accepted invitations to the
University's birthday celebration Feb. 22 in the Hetzel Union
Building.
The dinner at 6 p.m. in the HUB will climax a day in
which ground-breaking ceremonies for the new All-Faith
Chapel will be held at 11 a.m.,
and dedication of the nuclear re
actor facility at 3 p.m.
On the eve of the birthday,
Monday night, Feb. 21, a sympo
sium on the responsible uses of
power will be held in Schwab
Auditorium. Dr. Hugh L. Dryden,
tuitional advisory committee for
aeronautics, Washington D.C., and
Dr. Nels Ferre, professor of philo
sophical theology, School of Reli
gion, Vanderbilt University, will
speak.
Following the birthday dinner
approximately 600 guests will ga
ther in the ballroom of the HUB
where the formal ceremonies will
begin with a cake-cutting cere
mony at 7:15 p.m.
The Glee Club will entertain
for about 15 minutes and then a
limited number of introductions
will begin about 7:45 p.m. The
governor, alumni spokesmen, rep
resentatives from other colleges,
universities, land grant institu
tions, and students, faculty, and
borough officials will extend
greetings.
Judge to Speak
Judge James Milholland, re
cently re-elected chairman of the
Boarc: of Trustees, will speak
briefly, and then President Milton
S. Eisenhower will • deliver the
main address. The formal pro
gram will end about 9 p.m., after
which the guests will be free to
tour the building and attend a
premiere of the University's cen
tennial movie.
The ground-breaking activities
for the new chapel in the morn
ing will be at the southwest cor
ner of Hort Woods, near the Li
brary. Dr. Eisenhower, the Rev.
Luther H. Harshbarger, Univer
sity chaplain, and Milholland will
speak.
Strauss will be the only speaker
at the dedication of the recently
completed reactor. Attendance
will be by invitation only. The
reactor, which initially will be
operated at a power level of 100
kilowatts, is one of two presently
approved for a college campus.
Although the events in the
HUB will admit only those bear
ing invitations, the program will
be broadcast locally and transmit
ted to similar birthday dinners in
other cities via a special tele
phone "network."
(Continued on page eight)
Sparks and chemistry classes
from 119 Osmond. Television
equipment was installed in these
rooms over the weekend.
The equipment was supposed
to have been installed at the end
of classes last semester, but it
was discovered that the light level
was not high enough in either of
the rooms to transmit a good pic
ture. As a consequence, additional
lights had to be installed.
The rooms were turned over to
the engineers to install the equip
ment Friday afternoon. Ten men
worked day and night over the
weekend to get ready for Monday
morning.
Short tests were run during the
class periods Monday, which
(Continued on page eight)
Cake-Cutting
Equipment Installed
Tests Bun
r ‘ gitut
Bond OK'd
For Party
Violations
The All-University Elections
Committee last night proposed
that a $lO bond be set for each
party, which will be forfeited for
party violations during elections.
Earnest Famous, chairman of
the elections committee, will bring
this proposal before All-Univer
sity Cabinet next week as as
amendment to the All-University
Elections Code. Last fall penal
ties for violations were docking
candidates votes.
The elections committee may
require the party to forfeit the
bond, and may dock candidates
votes as it sees fit, if the proposal
is approved by Cabinet.
Earnest Famous, chairman of
the elections committee, an
nounced that the dates of
Spring elections will be March
30 and 31, rather than March
29 and 30, as erroneously re
ported by the Daily Collegian.
The amount of bond, tentatively
set at $lO, will be added to the
party budget. Each party must
have the bond deposited before
elections.
The committee also decided to
stamp matriculation cards for
clique meetings, rather than com
pile membership lists. Each party
will be responsible for its own
membership lists. Matriculation
cards will be stamped by mem
bers of election committee and
tickets distributed for the final
clique meetings.
It was decided at the meeting
that Sunday's Lion and Campus
Party clique meetings will be
open. It had been considered to
use membership lists from the
fall and spring elections.
AIM Will Elect
Secretary Tonight
The Association of Independent
Men Board of Governors will elect
a new secretary at 7:30 tonight in
108 Willard.
The post was left vacant when
Forrest Crawford, former secre
tary, pledged Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Crawford submitted his resigna
tion Jan. 12.
David Boucher, first semester
physics major, has already been
nominated for the post. Addition•
al nominations may be made from
the floor.
The revised AIM constitution
will also be read.
Grad Student Wins
$lOO Mining Award
Peter H. Cooper, graduate stu
dent in mining, has been awarded
a $lOO national prize in a com
petition on student papers, spon
sored by the American Institute
of Mining and Metallurgical En
gineers.
The paper, "The Control of
Stresses Around Underground
Openings," was written while he
was at the Colorado School of
Mines.
Cooper is a graduate of the Uni
versity of Birmingham and is a
native of Birmingham. England.
FIVE CENTS