Premiere —non Walker Photo Students and townspeople line up to buy tickets for the first Sunday movies In the borough. Theater managers reported heavy attendance. Today's Weather: Cloudy With « Possible Snow ' VOL. 56. No. 54 Journalist Named Assistant to Prexy Keith Spalding, assistant news editor of the New York Herald Tribune, will succeed Larry Dennis as administrative assistant to the president of the University. The appointment was approved Friday at the meeting of the executive committee of the Board v of Trustees. Spalding will start work on his new job Jan. 1 and will become the president’s assistant a when Dennis assumes the position of provost. Adrian O. Morse, the University provost, has announced he will retire later in the year. Spalding joined the Tribune staff in 1948. Since then, he has held positions as editorial assis tant, wire filer, sales promotion manager and ;Western manager with the Tribune syndicate, and from 1951 until last June, editor of the new ser vice. He has ber assistant net editor since Jui Prior to his st vice with tl Tribune, he wt a radio copj writer with sts tion KANS, W chita, Kans. He is the ther of five ci dren ranging age from nine an infant. Two v them are twins, Sp»Min« Spalding received his bachelor of tuts degree in psychology from the University of Kansas in 1942. Following World War 11, he en rolled in the general course of the graduate school at the Univer (Continued on page eight) APhiO Asks To Ma ke Flash Cards Alpha Phi Omega, national ser- : vice fraternity, has requested per- , mission to make its spring pledge project the making of flash cards , for a proposed flash card section, L according to a report given before , the University Student Centen- , nial Committee last night by Ro bert Heck, chairman of the com mittee. The Centennial Committee orig inally suggested the plan for flash cards. It also proposed that soph omore hat societies be co-ordina tors in working out the plan. Del- Shi, sophomore men’s hat society, as aceepted its part of the plan. The plan provides for the flash card section to be in the freshman section at Beaver Field. Sopho more hat societies will give out material to each of the students seated in the section according to the specific seat which the stu dent will sit in. Flash card cheers will be led by cheerleaders according to a numerical system of organization. When a certain number is called by the head cheerleader the stu dent puts up a certain color card following a code sheet. In other action the committee Voted unanimously to use their remaining funds for a Centennial gift to the Helen Eakin Eisen hower Chapel. It was suggested that a possible gift would be a registry desk. The committee has approxi mately $lOO to use for the gift Heck announced that last night’s meeting would be-the last formal meeting of the committee. Cloudiness, Flurries Predicted for Today Considerable cloudiness with fiossible snow flurries has been orecast for today by students in the department of meteorology. The temperature will reach a high of approximately 35 degrees, with a low of 25 tonight. The high yesterday was 31, the low sa OWI ®ljp Lack of Housing to Limit New Frosh The size of next fall’s in coming freshman class will again be impaired by the lack of adequate housing facilities. Dean of Admissions C. O. Williams said yesterday that the University again will be able to admit only about one-third of the approximately 10,000 high school graduates who will seek admission. Williams pointed out that of the more than 3000 who will be ad mitted, only about 2500 will be enrolled on campus because 'of limited dormitory facilities. Off campus centers are limited in classroom and laboratory space, he said. University officials expect the demand lor admission to reach (HoUpgtait FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA.,'TUESDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 6. 1955 Georgia Tech Will Play In Bowl, Board Decides ATLANTA, Dec. 5 (£•)— Georgia’s Board of Regents today rejected Gov. Marvin Grif fin’s move to have Georgia Tech’s football team pulled from the Sugar Bowl on a racial issue and opened the way for non-segregated games played outside the South. At the same time, it closed the door on any further bowl games, played in the South, which do not follow the segregation laws and customs of the host state. This was a direct slap at the Sugar Bowl officials who not only invited Pittsburgh, a team with a Negro player, to meet Tech, but also let Pittsburgh sell its tickets on a non segregated basis. Shortly before the regents acted, Griffin had backed down somewhat on his Friday Hornstein s Car Found Friday; Moved 2 Blocks Captain David Horstein, who told borough police his car had been stolen Thursday night, found it one day later—exactly two blocks from where he had parked it. Hornstein, attached to the Ar my Reserve Officers’ Training Corps Unit, parked his car in the alley behind the Dux Club. He left the car unlocked, with inten tions of returning shortly. While he was gone, someone had pushed the ear into a side lot to make passing room in the alley. A while later, a tow truck from a nearby garage, hauled Hornstein’s car to a safe place. For 18 hours, Hornstein won dered where his car had gone. Friday, he was notified of the whereabouts. its peak proportions in 1965. Au thoritative studies indicate the to tal enrollment by 1970 will top 20,000. Currently there are more than 12,000 students, including those in two-year courses, enrolled on cam pus and another 3000 at under graduate centers and the Mont Alto' Forestry School. Total en rollment is 15,352. While several additional wo men’s dormitories are in' the plan ning stage, they are not expected to be finished until 1956. Univer sity officials say this necessitates a ceiling of 500 on new women en rollees. Women’s dormitories can now hold a maximum of about 2300 students. A requirement that freshman men live on campus also will hold down that figure to approximate ly 2000. demand for a racial policy that not only would have barred Tech from the Sugar Bowl but would have prohibited any Georgia state college teams from playing against Negroes or before unseg regated spectators. The governor told his news con ference that his request to the regents chairman, Robert O. Ar nold of Covington, was aimed only at the Sugar Bowl and that he would not oppose nonsegregated games played m states where seg regation is not practiced. A storm of controversy was touched off by the governor’s move, which led to a noisy, all night demonstration Friday by Tech students who burned Grif fin in effigy, smashed into the state Capitol and were restrained by a cordon of police from storm ing the governor’s mansion. The regents’ resolution provides that in all athletic contests played in Georgia, the state’s laws which prohibit racial mixing must be observed. And it declares that in future contests outside the state, teams of Georgia state colleges “shall (Continued on page two) Maximum men’s dormitory ca pacity is about 2900. New male dormitories, like the women’s quarters, are projected into the future. Williams said the University will begin processing applications for next fall in February. Approx imately 2000 have already ap plied, he said. University policy requires that high school graduates in the up per two-fifths of their classes be admitted without examination, but that others must pass an en trance examination. Williams said that entrance re quirements are gradually being tightened to insure that those students who gain admission are fully qualified for college work and that full use is made of the University’s limited facilities. 19th Century Governor See Page 4 White Names Prexy 'Villain 7 In Farm Mixup John C. White, Texas commis sioner of agriculture, said Dr. Mil ton S. Eisenhower, president of the University, is the “real vil lain’’ of the Republican adminis tration farm policies. According to the Associated Press, White put the “blame” for the flexible parity price program and for advocating agricultural research and education “to the detriment of action” in Dr. Eisen hower. White, a potential Democratic candidate for governor of Texas, said Dr. Eisenhower is at blame because of his influence to keep Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson in office. “Milton Eisenhower, rather than Ezra Benson, is the real villain in this agricultural mixup,” he said. “It ought to be pointed out that he is the man who is running this agricultural thing. The trag edy of it isn’t only that he is wrong, but that he is not respon sible to the Dublic through hold ing public office,” he said. Dr. Eisenhower, who has been called one of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s chief advisers by many political insiders, had served in the Department of Ag riculture for many years. He ac cepted his first federal agricul tural post soon after his gradua tion from Kansas State College. Soph Advisory Board Sophomores interested in ap plying for the sophomore class advisory board may sign up at the Hetzel Union desk before Fri day, according to William Coale, sophomore class president. Roger Williams Fellowship Roger Williams Fellowship will .hold its weekly open house at 7 I tonight at 417 W. Hillcrest avenue. ■.t,2 FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers