The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 28, 1956, Image 1

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    Parties Begin Plans
For Spring Elections
At Clique Meetings
Both campus political parties began serious preparation
for the spring elections Sunday with steering committees in
the afternoon and clique meetings in the evening.
Party organization was formed and collection of dues
was discussed in the steering committee meetings while the
clique meetings were devoted to discussion of party policy
for the coming elections. Campus
party registered 06 students Sun
day night and Lion party regis
teted 108.
Campus Party got its third
Campus Party
Abele said that an illness at
home would likely make it neces
sary for him to leave campus on
weekends and that under these
circumstances hi s registration
would be to the party's benefit.
Snyder, who was unopposed
in the election, was nominated
by Jack McMeekin, former Cam
pus Party clique chairman. Sny
der had formerly been vice clique
chairman of the ;party.
4 Posts : Filled
Four other party posts were
filled at- the clique meeting. All
those elected were unopposed.
Those elected were: vice clique
chairman, David Richards, junior
in mechanical engineering from
Selinsgrove; senior class record
ing secretary, Barbara Mensinger,
senior in arts and letters from
Nazareth; sophomore class clique
chairman Robert Steele, . sopho
more in arts and letteri from
State College; and freshman class
clique chairman John Blott, fresh
man in psychology from Arling
ton, Va.
At the steering committee meet
ing the matter of financing the
party's campaign - was discussed
and a plan for paying dues was
set.
Appointments Made
Further campaign appointments
were presented by Abele and
were accepted by the steering
committee. Th e appointments
were: Off-campus ward, Samuel
Schonely, junior in arts and let
ters from Boyertown; projects,
Howard Downing, junior in archi
tecture from Towson, Md.; cam
paign, Mary Hurley, sophomore
in education from Canton; pub
licity,• David Faust, ' sophomore
in, education from Barnesville;
distribution, John - Kmetz, junior
in business administration from
Mc K e e s p o t•.t; parliamentarian,
Thomas Hollander, sophomore in
arts and letters from Monessen;
and platform„Curt Schaefer, jun
ior in business administration
from Gibsonia.
Election Plans Announced
All-University Elections COM
mittee last night set up plans for
the operation of the four voting
machines which will be located in
the Hetzel Union building during
the March 21 and 22 All-Univer
sity elections.
All four machines. will provide
for balloting for the three All-Uni
versity positions and the Athletic
Association presidency. In addi
tion, two of these machines will
provide for voting for the three
senior class positions and two will
be for voting for the three junior
class positions.
The Athletic Association slot
will be blanked out when women
students are voting.
Roger Beidler, Elections Com
Reds Reaffirm Khrushchev as Head
MOSCOW, Feb. 27 (R')—The
S o.v i e t Communist party's
Central COmmittee kept the
U.S.S.R.'s "collective leader
ship" intact today. It re-elect
ed all 11 rnembers of the rul
ing Presidium and retained Ni
kita S. Khrushchev as the party's
first secretary.
The committee, how - ever, ex
panded the number of alternate
Presidium members from two to
six, naming Defense Minister
Georgi K. Zhukov to one of the
four new places. Extension of- this
clique chairman of the semester
when William Snyder, junior in
business administration, from
Paoli, was elected to replace John
Abele.
Lion Party
A long list of appointments
dominated the Lion party steer
ing committee meeting, and party
member registration keynoted the
initial compaign clique meeting.
Robert Spadaro, Lion clique
chairman, made the following ap
pointments: campaign chairman,
Richard Lacey; publicity chair
man,_Richard Moon; membership
chairman, Joshua Lederburg; fi
nancial chairman, Joseph Hen
nessey; assistant campaign chair
man, Maxwell Schultz; assistant
publicity chairman, Michael
Walker; secretariat, Flore n c e
Kushner.
Goldstein Appointed
Assistant platform chairman,
George Goldstein; Nittany-Pol
lock publicity chairman, Ronald
Ross; Thompson 'publicity chair
man, Patricia Reno; vice women's
campaign chairman, Margaret
McCloskey; vice sorority cam
paign chairman, Glenna Gilger;
assistant fraternity coordinator,
Jan Whiteside; upper class men's
campaign chairman, Michael Eny
edy; vice upper class men's chair
man, William Harrison.
Spadaro scheduled Sunday's
steering meeting for 2 p.m'. ',:jn M
217 Willard. He announced t
Sunday night's clique meeting
will consist of opening nomina
tions for all - nine offices to be
voted upon in' the coming elec
tions. Final election of all nine
candidates will take place at the
March 11th meeting, he said.
Advisory Board to Meet
The Lion party advisory board
will meet at 11 p.m. tomorrow
and Sunday in 33 Metzger Build
ing. The purpose of the meetings
will be to iron out publicity and
campaign problems and to set
up a better communication and
coordination system within the
party. Finance, fraternity, co
ordination, publicity, platform,
campaign, and membership com
mittees will . be represented at
the meeting.
mittee chairman, once again em
phasized the fact that all students
must be registered with their re
spective party in order to cast a
vote when party candidates are
chosen at the final clique meet
ings. Elections Committee tables
will again be set up outside of the
clique meeting rooms Sunday
night. Students must have their
matriculation cards in order to
register.
The committee designated March
12 at 8 a.m. as the official opening
date for party campaigns. Party
platforms will be reviewed by
Elections Committee tomorrow at
8 p.m. The location' will' be an
nounced later.
Elections Committee will meet
Monday at 7:15 p.m. in 9 Carnegie.
honor to the World War II hero
once again underscored the rise
of the armed forces' influence
since-Stalin's-death.
Moscow radio, broadcasting the
names, listed the Presidium in al
phabetical order, denoting equal
ity of leadership, but when refer
ring to the alternates, placed Zhu
kov's name first. This was deemed
significant of his prominent posi t
tion in the party's councils.
This Presidium—called the Pol
itburo in the Stalin era—rules the
party and the nation in the name
lof the Central Committee of 133
members. The Committee was
chosen at the party's 20th Con
gress last week. As first secretary.
Tilt Elailg
VOL. 56. No. 91 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 28. 1956 FIVE CENTS
Theme, Points Set
For 1956 Carnival
"Show or Song Titles" has been selected by the Spring Week Committee as the theme
for the 1956 carnival.
The point system for
. the individual Spring Week events was also adopted at the meet
ing Sunday. _ -
The committee selected its theme after All-University Cabinet voted last Thursday to
have a carnival theme and to allow the Spring Week Committee to select it.
The three categories of the carnival will be true presentation, parody, and originality
DeMatteo Titled
Frosh Class
Queen at 'Hop'
Filippa DeMatteo. arts and let
ters major from Curtisville, was
crowned freshman class queen
Saturday at the Frosh Hop.
The queen was crowned and
presented an engraved trophy cup
by Alvin Clemens, master of cere
monies.
The four runners-up were Kar-
Filippa De Matteo
Froth Hop Queen
in DeJuhasz, music education ma
jor fr o m Heidelberg, Germany;
Priscilla Doll, education major
from York; Arlene Kondur, arts
and letters - major from Morris
and Patricia Reno, arts and
letters major from Forest Hills.
The finalists received necklaces
bearing the University seal.
Approximately 600 persons at
tended the dance.
Snow Flurries Predicted
For This Morning
The forecast for today, accord
ing to the students in the depart
ment of meteorology, is possible
snow flurries this morning with
clearer weather at night.
The predicted high is 40 degrees
and the low will be 25. The maxi
mum yesterday was 45 while the
low was 35.
Make-up Workshop
A make-up workshop will be
held at 7 tonight in the make-up
room in Schwab Auditorium. The
workshop is open to the public.
Khrushchev remains boss of the
party's vast apparatus of more
than seevn million party members
and candidate members. Khrush
chev becalm party boss in 1953
when Georgi Malenkov, then pre
mier, stepped down from the post.
Stalin kept the job to himself un
til hp died_
For the first time in Soviet
history, a woman achieved the up
per, reaches of the party apparatus.
Ekaterina Alexandrovna Furtseva
became an alternate member of
the Presidium. Chief of the Mos
cow par t y apparatus for some
time, she had been singled out by
Khrushchev in recent months for
notable honors.
F„,r
/ C,
' 1 . : :.
.. t. t'- ?..i^l '.
L Y .'
I A 41 1 :IA
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
according to the vote of the com
mittee.
At a later date participants
will receive a form from the
committee which they will fill
out and state the name of the
category under which they wish
to be entered. The committee will
officially enter them under this
category.
Committee Vol..
Last week the committee voted
to distribute. the Spring Week
points so that 45 per cent of the
overall points be given for the
Carnival, 25 per cent for the Mad
Hatter's Parade, 15 per cent for
the coronation of Miss Penn State,
and 15 per cent for the He-Man
Contest. ,
The committee, in an attempt
to make delegation of points
fairer, set 'up the plan for the
overall points, and also set up a
scale for the delegation of points
within each event according to
Richard Seng, committee chair
man.
Carnival Judging
Judging for the carnival will
be based on four criteria: number
of tickets, good taste, adherence
to theme and classification, and
quality
,of production.'
A winner will be selected for
each of the three carnival cate
gories. The winner in each cate
gory will be selected on a 400
point basis with a maximum of
100 points to be given for each
of the four judging criteria.
Total Points Given
Total carnival points will be
given by a ratio. Each of the
three first place carnival winners
will receive' a 50 point bonus
which will be added to their 400
point maximum total. The three
second place winners will each
have 30 points added to their
total. 'and :the three third place
winners will receive 10 bonus
points each. -
The three first place winners
will each receive 45 Spring Week
(Continued on page eight)
Women Must Plan
Full Education-Morse
Adrian 0. Morse, provost, urged last night that women
t. ry to meet their difficult educational requirements by begin
ning now to make a plan for a total education that "takes in
a full and generous life."
Morse made these comments last night at a meeting dur
ing which he and President Milton S. Eisenhower were in-
stalled as honorary members of
Phi Chi Theta, women's profes
sional business fraternity.
"The circumstances under which
women will use their educational
powers differs widely from those
in which men will use theirs,"
Monte continued. "Most men will
follow one vocation throughout
life," he said, "but women will
'follow one of several paths."
The physical, biological, and so
cial sciences and the humanities
are the .foundation of this plan,
Ihe said.
"The world in which we live is
made up of all four categories,"
'he said, "and none of us can be
ignorant of any of these divisions
of basic knowledge."
Learning to study independent
ly is the first objective of this
plan of education, Morse said.
"One of our weaknesses," he
pointed out, "Is dependence on the
instructor and on work in class
Tottrgian
Physical Plant
Starts Annual
Spring Cleanup
"Operation Spring Cleanup" is
now underway by the landscape
and grounds division of Physical
Plant.
Workmen have been engaged
for the past several weeks in
general cleanup in preparation
for main spring jobs—reseeding
of lawns 'and pruning and spray
ing of trees and shrubbery.
Pruning to Begin
Pruning and spraying is ex
pected to get underway about
April 1, according to Walter W.
Trainer, supervisor of the Physi
cal Plant division.
Workmen have been placing
decayed oak saw dust, some of
which is about 40 years old,
around campus shrubbery.
Saw dust serves as a humus
by retaining ground moisture and
keeping the. plant's roots cool, It
also serves to retard weed growth,
Trainer said.
The saw dust is obtained by
the University from saw mills on
Bald Eagle Mountain.
The other jobs on the cleanup
include sweeping walks and roads
to remove cinders and other ma
terial used for icy conditions and
removing dead branches from
trees.
Trainer said his division will
be on a close look out for sighs
of the Dutch Elm disease, which
caused an "epidemic" two years
ago among campus trees. Last
year, however, only one tree was
infected with the disease.
"Frosh Council to Meet
The Freshman Council will meet
at 6:30 tonight in 218 lietzel
(Union. -
and the failure of the student to
put suffiicent effort and care on
the subject itself."
As a second objective, Morse
urged broadening and deepening
of education by planned reading.
Morse suggested that women
student catalogue those subjects
they would have liked to take in
college and plan to fill in those
omissions by, night classes, cor
respondence courses, lectures, con
certs, or television courses.
Going to Indin
_ .
Dr. Eisenhower, who introduced
Morse to the group, saki that the
U.S. government has selected
Morse to become cultural affairs
officer in one of the most difficult
spots in the world, India.
Under him would be four other
cultural attaches to develop un
derstanding that would promote
a cooperation between the coun
tries on which a, more abiding
peace could be built, Dr. Eisen
hower said.
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