The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 29, 1955, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Matmen,Gymnasts 2d in MCAArs'
National Collegiate Athletic Association wrt......ing
handily defeated Seel for the first time in four tries, 3.2, to win
the crown. Oberly defeated Bob Konovsky in the semi-finals who
was runner-up in the same weight last year.
Political Candidates End
Campaign Visits Tonight
Campus political campaigning will end for
Lion, State, and Campus party candidates' visits
town living units today.
Voting will take place from 8
Thursday in the Recreation Roo
Three or four voting machines
will be used .and they should ar
rive today, Ernest Famous, All-
University Election Committee
chairman, said yesterday.
Lion party All-University candidates
will visit phi Sigma Delta, Chi Phi, and
Alpha Epsilon. Pi at noon, and Sigma Phi
Alpha, Alpha CM Sigma, Zeta Beta Tau,
and Sigma Alpha Mu at dinner.
Senior class candidates will solicit at
Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Sigma Phi, Phi
Kappa, and Lambda Chi Alpha at 12:80
p.m. They will visit Phi Delta Theta, Beta
Theta Pi, Kappa Alpha Psi, and Alpha Phi
Delta at dinner.
Junior class candidates will be at Phi
Kappa Psi, Alpha CM Rho, Theta Xi,
Theta Delta Chi at noon, at Phi Mu Delta,
Phi Sigma Kappa, Delta Theta Sigma, and
Theta CM at 5:80 p.m.
All-University candidates will visit the
West Dorms, and junior class candidates
will visit Pollock dormitories from' 7:80 to
11:30 tonight. Senior candidates will not
solicit.
State party All-University candidates
will campaign a$ Tau Phi Delta, Delta
Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Beta
Sigma Rho at noon. Senior candidates will
visit Phi Mu Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa,
Delta Theta Sigma, and Theta Chi; junior
candidates will be at Phi Kappa Psi, Alpha
Chi Rho, • Alpha Tan Omega, and Alpha
Gamma Rho at noon.
State party candidates will campaign to
gether tonight. They will speak in the
West Dorms dining hall at 6 p.m., Mc-
Allister • dining 'hall at 6:80 p.m., in Ath
erton dining hall at 6:46 p.m., and in
West Dorms dining hall 'at 6 p.m.
Campus party, All-University candidates
will be at Alpha Zeta, Sigma , Chi and
Sigma Nu at noon, and Phi Delta Theta',
Phi Gamma Delta, Beta Theta Pi, and
Alpha Phi Delta at 6 p.m.
Senior class candidates will visit Alpha
Epsilon Pi, Chi Phi, and Tau Kappa Ep
silon at 12:80 p.m., and Kappa Delta Rho,
PI Kappa Alpha, Delta Chi, and Phi Kap
pa Tau at dinner.
Junior candidates will visit Alpha Rho
Chi, Sigma Phi Alpha, and Alpha Chi
Sigma at noon, and Delta Theta Sigma,
Phi Sigma Kappa, Theta Chi, and Phi
Mu Alpha at 5:30 p.m.
Big 4 Talks Discussed
WASHINGTON, March 28 (. I P)
The State Department said today
the United States, Britain, and
France are engaged in "quite ac
tive consultations" on the ques
tion of a Big Four meeting with
Russia.
The department's press officer,
Henry Suydam, said officials in
Washington, London an d Paris
are conducting "top level discus
sions" thru diplomatic channels.
lelitlini
30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow and
of the Hetzel Union Building.
Last Opportunity
To Show Spark
Of Past Years
By DOTTIE STONE
Today is the last day of politi
cal campaigning, and the last
chance for the parties to show the
banner-waving, horn-honking • en
thusiasm of campaigns of pre
vious years.
Voting machines •will be in oper
ation tomorrow and Thursday to
tabulate the results of the 12 of
fices which will be filled by the
elections.
Three All-University off ice s,
six class offices, and three Ath
letic Association offices will be
filled. Students may vote for All-
University offices and their own
class officers. Only men students
may vote for AA candidates.
The three candidates for presi
dent offer the only true compe
tition for AA offices as only one
candidate is running for AA sec
retary. The dandidate for AA
president with the second highest
number of votes will become vice
president.
Although campaign literature
and publicity have been spread
around campus and town for the
All-University and class officers
by the political parties, little pub
licity has been circulated for AA
candidates.
Political parties have been tak
ing their candidates on tours of
fraternities and dormitories at
(Continued on page eight)
World at a Glance
U.S. Ratification
Seen for Treaty
WASHINGTON, March 28 (!P)—
The Senate leadership set up a
schedule today that may bring
United Staes ratification of the
German rearmament treaty before
the week is over.
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles will testify tomorrow be
fore the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, in behalf of the Paris
accords which would r e arm
Western Germany as part of the
Western defense against commun
ism.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D•
Tex.), the Senate majority leader,
told the Senate he hoped the com
mittee could approve the pacts by
Ttainiday.
Oberly
tourney,
this semester with
to dormitories, and
WASHINGTON, March 28 (AP)
—A major part of President
Dwight D. Eisenhower's military
reserve program was approved by
a House Armed Services subcom
mittee today after 10 weeks of
public hearings and study.
Military leaders have indicated
they will use the legislation to
build up an active, trained, and
ready reserve of two million men
by 1959.
The subcommittee approved
creation of a volunteer force of
between 100,000 and 250,000 young
men who would take six months
of active training and then serve
an additional 7% years in the re
serves.
Tllr
VOL. 55, No. 111 STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 29, 1955 FIVE CENTS
Work Will
On Bowling
Construction will be started on 10 new bowling alleys in the basement of the addition
to Recreation Hall and in White Hall May 1, Ernest B. McCoy, dean of the College of Physi
cal Education and Athletics, said yesterday.
McCoy said six of the alleys will be located in Rec Hall and four in White Hall. Con
struction of the alleys will be started first in Rec Hall, McCoy said, and then shift to White
Hall as the Rec Hall alleys are completed and construction crews freed.
TKE, KAT
IFC-P anhe I
In a repetition of last year, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Kappa Alpha
Theta were .named winners of the Interfraternity-Panhellenic Coun
cil sing Sunday night in the State College High School auditorium.
It was Tau Kappa Epsilon's fifth win in as many years, and
Kappa Alpha Theta's second win in a row.
In the second place spots, how
ever, there was a complete
change. Chi Phi, a newcomer to
the finals this year, took second
in the fraternity class and Alpha
Chi Omega was second for sorori
ties. Last year's second place win
ners were Beta Theta Pi and Kap
pa Delta.'
A rotating trophy will be given
to the winners at the IFC-Panhel
banquet Thursday night. Perma
nent plaques will be given to the
first and second place winners.
Under a rule instituted last year,
the rotating trophy will become
permanent if a group wins the
sing for three consecutive years.
A near-capacity crowd attended
the finals t despite a heavy snow
storm which blanketed State Col
lege Sunday night.
Tau Kappa Epsilon, directed by
Alexander Zerban, eighth semes
ter music education major, sang
the Alma Mater, a required song
for entrants, and "Teke Toast."
They have used the present ar
rangement of "Teke Toast" for
the past three years.
Kappa Alpha Theta, directed
by Dixie Waring, sixth semester
home economics major, sang
"Thetas Everywhere" and "Song
of Praise." "Thetas Everywhere"
was also used in last year's con
test,
Chi Phi, directed by Richard
Coolbaugh, fourth semester arts
and letters major, sang "Ode to
Chi Phi," as their second num
ber.
Alpha Chi Omega, directed by
Diane Haines, eighth semester
(Continued on page eight)
House Group OK's
Ike's Reserve Plan
•
El atig
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
Greeks to Hold
Co-ed Dinners
Greeks will continue their cele
bration of Greek Week tonight,
with exchange dinners scheduled
between fraternities and sorori
ties.
Approximately 820 men and
women from 48 fraternities and
22 sororities will participate.
Eight men from each fraternity
will eat in women's dining halls
and eight women fr o m each
sorority will eat in a fraternity.
Men eating in women's dining
halls should be at the dormitories
by 5:10 p.m. according to Robert
Eisenhuth, exchange dinner co
chairman.
Fraternities will furnish trans
portation for women who are eat
ing in fraternity houses. Men will
meet women going to fraternities
also at 5:10 p.m. in the lobby of
the dormitory where the sorority
suite is located.
IFC-Panhel Ball Tickets
Tickets for the Interfraternity
Council-Panhellenic Council ball,
to be held from 9 to 1 Friday night
in Recreation Hall, will go on sale
Friday at the Hetzel Union desk
in the HUB.
Pollock Urges Pledges
To Maintain High Ideals
0. Edward Pollock, assistant to the dean of men in charge at
fraternity affairs, urged 'l5 outstanding pledges last night to live up
to the high ideals of fraternity life.
Speaking at the Outstanding Pledge Banquet in the Hetzel
Union Building, Pollock traced the growth of the fraternity move
ment, pointing out that there are
over 3 million fraternity and so
rority men and women in the
United States today.
He also commented on the large
number of alumni, stating that
his own fraternity, Delta Upsilon,
had 30,000 living alumni alone.
"Why are all these people in
terested in fraternities?' he asked,
referring to the alumni.
Answering his own question,
Pollock replied it was because
they see something in fraterni
ties. "They are trying to live up
to those ideals which you find in
your own aims and purposes," he
said.
"These are all high• ideals and
essentially the same," Pollock
continued.
"These people are living up to
these ideals through selfless serv
ice," Pollock said.
Posing another question to the
Totirgiatt
By MIKE MILLER
Win
Sing
Begin
Alleys
McCoy said the alleys would in
dude the most modern equipment
available, including automatic
pinsetters, electric foul line con
trols, and scoreboards above the
foul line which will reflect the
score on the players' score sheets.
The alleys will be used for phy
sical education classes, intramural
competition, and individual stu
dent use, according to McCoy.
Bowling Classes
McCoy explained that the al
leys will not eliminate the need
for conducting physical education
bowling classes in commercial es
tablishments in the borough, but
would permit more students to
take bowling in their required
physical education curriculum.
A nominal charge will be made
for use of the bowling alleys to
help alleviate the cost of construc
tion, McCoy said.
He said the money realized
from the operation of the . alleys
could also be put towards the
construction of additional recre
ational facilities.
9-Hole Putting Green
McCoy said that construction of
a nine-hole putting green will be
completed in the basement of the
Rec Hall addition by fall.
New tennis courts are being
planned for the area surrounding
the site of the new women's dorm
itories near the corner of College
avenue and Shortlidge road, Mc-
Coy said.
These courts will be constructed
as the dorms are built, he said.
A rifle range "which is one of
the most modern in the East" has
been completed and in use for 10
days in the basement of the Rec
reation Hall, McCoy said.
The rifle range is available for
the ROTC rifle teams and for phy
sical education classes. No charge
is made for ammunition used in
the course of the class instruc
tion, the dean said.
pledges, Pollock asked if they
will be able to say this 10, 15, or
20 years from now.
"If you can," he said, "you are
doing your job. If not I feel sorry
for you."
Pollock congratulated those
present on being chosen as out
standing pledges.
He called the pledge the "back
bone of the fraternity," saying it
is the outstanding pledge who
leads the fraternity on.
"Were you a wise choice," he
asked, replying that "we'll see in
two or three years."
Sandford Lichtenstein, banquet
co-chairman, was master of cere
monies for the banquet. Enter
tainment was provided by ven
triloquist Philip Wein. John Car
penter, Interfraternity Councii
president, was also introduced,