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

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    today's W.ath.r:
Portly Cloudy
and Cold
VOL. 56, No. 39
8010 to Hay
Staff
Trail
Unofficial returns from.four of the six State College pre
cincts reporting shortly before midnight showed four of five
University faculty-staff members trailed in the race for four
seats on the borough council.
Dr. Eric A. Walker, dean of the College of Engineering
and Architecture, was the only faculty member among the
leading four nominees for the
council.
The four faculty-staff metn
bets, running on the Democratic
ticket Were 'Dr. Nennoyer F. Eng
lish, professor of wildlife man
agement; Ralph .W.• McComb,
University librarian; James F.
Keim, associate professor of ag
riculture extension; and Mrs.
Edith H. Anderson, secretary in
the Division of Intermediate Reg
istration.
With • East, West Central, East
Central, and West precincts re
porting, Dr. Walker and . Robert
H. • Breon, Republicans, led bor
ough council candidates with 1285
and 1292 votes respectively. Ned
C. Cummings and Mrs. Gladys
Tanner, Republicans, followed
with 1212 and 1199 votes. •
Mrs. Anderson paced the Dem
oCratic nominees, although trail
ing Republican nominees, with
1979 votes, was followed by Mc-
Comb with 821 votes, Keim with
723 votes, and Dr. English with
771 votes.
When -broken down into pre
cinct totals, returns show the four
Republican candidates had a
greater margin of victory in the
West Central precinct, with Dr.
Walker's 304 , votes leading the
field. Brecon also reached the 300
figure with exactly 300 votes.
West Central voters gave Cum
mings 297 votes; Mrs. Tanner 292,
Mrs. Anderson 222, McComb 178,
Keim 165, and Dr. English 164.
Breon led voting in the East
precinct with a 218 total, followed
by Dr. Walker, 214; Cummings,
204; Mrs. Tanner, 192; Mrs. An
derson, 142; McComb, 133; Keim,
119; and Dr. English, 116.
Voting -in the East Central pre
cinct was almost a carbon copy
of the trend in the West Central
precinct. Breon led the voting
with 327 votes. He was followed
by Dr. : Walker with 320 votes,
Mrs. Tanner with 296, Cummings
'with '289, Mrs. Anderson again
topped democrats with' 190 votes,
compared to 160 for Dr. English,
159 for McComb, and 140 for
Keim.
Tabulations in the West pre
cinct showed the heaviest- voting
of the: four precincts reporting,
with Dr. Walker and Breon poll
ing 447- votes apiece, Following
Walker and Breon. were Mrs. An
derson with' 425 votes, CumMings,
422; Mrs. Tanher 419; McComb,
351; Dr. English, 331; and Keim,
299.
Hearing Set
For Frosh
Car Violator
The first freshman to be prose
cuted for having a car on campus
will appear tomorrow before the
Senate Committee on Student Af
fairs Subcommittee on Discipline.
Dean of Men Frank J. Simes
said yesterday that the student
was one of four who were caught
with cars on campus and brought
to his office.
Simes 'said the other, students
were cleared of charges. One stu
dent turned out to be a sopho
more. Sophomores are not subject
to the car ban. The other two,
Simes said, were driving cars be
longing to relatives who had the
cars in the borough for a short
time only.
Freshman discovered with cars
on campus or in the borough of
State College are subject to sus
pension.
Two weeks ago Simes stressed
the fact that the car ban applies
to both first and second semes
ter freshman. Simes said he
thought that some second semes
ter freshmen were under the im
pression that the ban did not
apply to them.
Applications for hearings by
the Association of Independent
Men freshman car screening com
mittee are now being accepted at
the Hetzel Union desk.
Freshmen who feel they. should
be permitted to have cars on
campus should send a letter for
an interview to Bruce Lieske,
AIM president.
TIM Will Elect
2 to AIM Board,,
Discuss Ice Revue
Elections for vice president and
a representative-at-large to the
Association of Indepdndent Men
board of governors , will be held
at a meeting of Town Independ
ent Men at 7:30 tonight in 216
Hetzel
Edward Dull, present vice
president,' will , continue to serve
on the" AIM screening board after
his resignation:-An 11th represen
tative-at-large will be elected to
fill a positiohcreated,by a growth
in the number of independent
men living. in the borough.
The proposed "Ice Revue" will
be discussed and a new recrea
tion chairman will be appointed.
Final approval will be sought for
TlM's pushcart race. TlM's an
nual budget report will be given
by the treasurer.
All TIM representatives-at
large ar e requested to attend
meetings of the group or be sub
ject to removal from office.
Kenton Concert Ticket
Tickets for the Stan Kenton
concert, to be held Nov. 18 in
Recreation Hall, will go on sale
to members tonight at a meet
ing of the Penn State Jazz Club.
The meeting will be held at
7:30 in 110 Electrical Engineering.
Tickets will be available to the
public tomorrow for $1.50 at the
Hetzel Union desk, the MUSIC
Room, and the Harmony Shop.
eci4r B a u m , (gnu
Members
in Race
By LARRY JACOBSON
Molotov Asks Red-Rukd Germany
GENEVA, Nov. 8 (iP)—So-'
viet Foreign Minister V. M.
Molotov stunned the Big Four
conference tonight with a
thunderous demand for Com
munist dominance in a United
Germany,
The Western Allies immediately
obtained a recess until tomorrow.
A French delegation officer said
"tomorrow's meeting could be the
last."
"If Molotov maintains his posi
tion, including his statement that
Russia does not intend to submit
any other proposals on German
unification, it is difficult to see
how the West could make any
agreement or compromise on any
other front in the agenda," the
French official said.
Molotov's sweeping rejection of
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
STATE COLLEGE, PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1955
EVEN HOUSEWORK comes to a halt on election day as
evidenced by the three women shown above casting their
votes at the borough municipal building. From left to right,
they are: Mrs. Edna Daugherty, Mrs. Rose Murtorff, and
Mrs. Margaret Stover.
Frosh, Sophomores
To Vote Tomorrow
Editorial on Page Four
All-University elections for freshman and sophomore
class offices will be held tomorrow and Friday in the card
room of the Hetzel Union Building. Elections will be held
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
All freshman-and sophomore students are eligible to vote
for candidates in their class.
In order to vote, students must
present their matriculation cards.
Their names will be checked off
prepared lists of all freshman and
sophomore students
As in the spring, this fall's elec
tions will be centralized, All-
University Elections committee
decided. Two voting machines
will be used. Students may vote
only once, and if caught voting
more than once they will be sub
ject to disciplinary action.
Campaigning by Lion and Cam
pus parties will end at 5 p.m. to
day. The parties have been cam
paigning for 10 days by distri
buting publicity material and
sending candidates through the
dormitories and -fraternities.
The positions - ofpresident, vice
president, and secretary-treasurer
are open in 'each glass.
Lion part Y's Sophornote
dates are Edward Long, arts and
letters Major ftom Wana m i e,
president;' Richard Schlipp, arts
and letters major from Mohnton,
vice president; Barbara Rinehart,
(Continued on page eight)
any plan to unify Germany by
free electiong in the foreseeable
future And his blunt demand that
all Germany follow the Commun
ist course of the East German re
gime demolished Western hopes
of conciliation, built up by his
Moscow remark last night that he
was bringing back "better bag
gage" to Geneva.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles told the conference:
"What Mr. Molotov has said
seems so serious in terms of the
directive of our heads of govern
ment and the hopes with which
we came here, that P prefer to
study the matter overnight before
speaking."
French Foreign Minister An
toine Pinay and the British For
eign Secretary Harold Macmillan
agreed.
Western press officers jointly
announced after the session that
ggiatt
Little Theater
Series to Open
The Director's Theater, under
the auspices of the Experimental
Theater, will present a scene from
"Italian Straw Hat" at 5 p.m. to
morrow in the Little Theater in
the basement of Old Main.
The 19th century French farce
by Gene Labiche and Mare Mi
chel will be directed by Paul Tal
ley, graduate in dramatics from
Oil City. This presentatioh is the
first in a series of five o'clocks
to be presented on Thursdays.
The cast includes Betty Rice,
Millis Mershon, Mary Taylor,
James Carroll, Walter Vail. Other
members are David Faust, Domi
hick Landro, Richard Land, and
John Thomas.
The Experimental Theater pre,
sentation of scenes from "King
Lear" was canceled because the
cast could not be completed with
appropriate actors for the parts.
the initial allied impression of
Molotov's speech is that it "tears
up" the directive of the summit
conference last July.
"It indicates," they said, "a de
termination by the Soviet Union
to accept no settlement of the
German problem that does not
involve the communization of all
Germany."
Molotov denounced the West's
proposal of last Friday for Ger
many's unification by free elec
tions in September 1956. He called
it "unreal and dangerous," reviv
ing militarism and capitalism in
all Germany and directing these
forces against the Soviet Union.
He said Germany unity can
only be achieved when the Ger
mans in East and West "find a
common language and take the
task of preparing the settlement
in their own hands."
Political
Campaigns
See Page 4
Movies
Unofficial
Vote Shows
212 Margin
By JACK MELDER
Unofficial election results
revealed late last night that
the voters of State College had
approved the measure provid
ing for the showing of movies
after 2 p.m. on Sunday by a mar
gin of 212 votes.
The unofficial vote was 2006
for Sunday movies; 1784 against.
Thirty-one ballots were thrown
out because they were mis
marked.
The 212-vote margin is the
largest spread either way on the
measure which had been defeate4l
in preyious elections in 1947 and
1951.
Actually, there was little cam
paigning done by either side in
this year's election with the ex
ception of a heavy flow of last
minute pleas circulated by both
sides.
No Church Stand
The State College Council of
Churches, which represents many
Protestant churches in the bor
ough, took no official action in
the campaign.
A group of ministers did come
out against the measure near the
end of the campaign.
The Rev. Melvin Whitmire,
Evangelical United Brethren
Church, acted as chairman for
the group. He could not be
reached for comment late last
night.
The Rev. Frank Montgomery,
St. Paul's Methodist Church, a
member of the group, was reached
but he had no comment to make.
Kneebone Remains Silent
Leon Kneebone, president of
the State College Council of
Churches, said last night he
had nothing to say about the
results. He said the group had
studied the question and decided
to take no official action.
Many of the ministers of the
borough were split on the ques
tion and some of them took in
dependent action, Kneebone said.
A breakdown of the unofficial
tabulation shows the voters in
the North and South precincts
were largely responsible for ap
proving the measure.
3 Precincts Against
In three of the precincts—East,
East Central, and West Central—
the measure was defeated.
The West precinct passed the
mbasure by a margin of 12 votes.
Thirty-one of the votes cast were
discounted because they were
mismarked.
The voting in the West precinct
was significant since it has been
largely responsible for the meas
ure being defeated in the past
two elections.
Following is a breakdown of
the 3821 votes cast in yesterday's
election:
East
East Central .
West
West Central
North
South
Total
Traffic Court Dismisses 2;
7 Others Fined $3l Total
Traffic Court Monday night
levied suspended fines on tw o
students and fined seven others a
total of $3l. Two cases were dis
missed.
Fines were broken down as fol
lows: $9 for failure to report to
traffic court; $4 for failing to reg
ister cars; and $lB for minor vi
olations.
Students who failed to report
to traffic court will automatical
ly be found guilty and fined.
FIVE CENTS
Yes No
164 171
213 257
398 387
212 279
469 378
550 312
2006 1784