Today's Weather: Cloudy With Rain VOL. 56. No. 103 Cain Named Winner Of 'Queen Contest' Anne Cain, junior in applied arts from Unionville, has been named the University's winner in the Campus Cover Girl Contest, sponsored by the Roto Magazine section of the Pittsburgh Press. The campus sponsor was the Daily Col legian Miss Cain is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, Angel Flight, and a candidate for,the art staff of LaVie. She was a finalist in the Homecoming Queen contest in the fall of 1954, and a member of the court in May Day last year. Judges of the 32 entrants .were George L. Donovan, manager of the department of Associate Stu dent Activities, Ronald Walker, Collegian photography editor, and Jacqueline H u d g i n s, Collegian Editorial director. Miss Cain's picture will be sent to the Pittsburgh Press, where another panel of three judges will select a winner from con- AIM Board To Report On 'Living' • The Association of Independent Men's Board of Governors will hear a report on the progress of the AIM-Leonides community liv ing committee by committee chairman Benjamin Winslow, to night at 7 in the Board Room of the Hetzel Union building. Winslow will report on the number of colleges and univer sities which he has contacted which now have a community liv ing arrangement, and will supple ment the report with informa tion gathered from administration officials. • A plan of action which the com mittee will pursue will also be presented. Appointments will be made •to the committee, which has recently been joined by mem bers of Leonides. The projects committee will present a preliminary report on the AIM Newsletter. The executive committee report will include a suggestion to refer to the projects committee the con cept of an AIM opinion-survey board, to be conducted by the AIM Newsletter. Presidents of West Halls, Nit tany, and Pollock Councils, and Town Independent Men will ore sent reports on their activities during the Fall semester. Robert Seyler, freshman in bus iness administration from Du- Bois, will be appointed an NISA convention delegate. Other appointments will in clude Robert Hoover, freshman in physical education from Phila delphia; Morgan Lewis, junior in psychology from Wilkes-Barre; and Bruce Bartholomew, sopho (Continued on page eight Cyprus Guerrilla Urges British Resistance NICOSIA, Cyprus, March 13 (JP)—The mysterious leader of Cyprus' Eoka guerrilla organization urged his followers to day to intensify the fight against Britain. Eoka is the underground terrorist army of the Greek Cy priot enosis-union with Greece movement. In the first pamphlets secretly circulated in Nicosia since Archbishop Makarios was exiled to the Seycelles Islands last Fri day, "Dighennis" the name adopted by the Eoka leader— promised swift and deadly re prisal against an y member of enosis who might defect to the enemy headed by "G auleiter Harding"—Field Marshal Sir John Harding, the British gover nor, Meanwhile virtually the entire island was gripped by a general strike which shut down shops, stores, banks, service establish ments and newspapers for the third day. Scattered demonstrations broke out in Nicosia but they were quickly suppressed by police and riot squads. At least eight per sons were arrested and one was injured slightly. At Phaneromeni Church, sol diers and - police chased Cypriot ii...i. f li c i r El a itg s ~i ., : i . „ ) ..x ) ..) iTti u ,• las• - :4- STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH 14, 1956 Anne Cain Cover Girl Winner testants of Colleges in Pennsyl vania, West Virginia, and Ohio. The contest winner will have her picture published in color on the cover of the April 1 Roto Magazine along with a biograph ical sketch. Judges who will select tile win ner from the tri-state area are Lenore Brundige, Pittsburgh Press fashion editor; Fredrick Burleigh, director of the Pitts burgh Playhouse; Harold Corsini, photographer; and Edgar A. Roth, (Continued on page eight) Leader boys across the roof of the church to halt the ringing of the bell which went on intermittently all morning. The youngsters were dispersed repeatedly but they came back a half dozen times to sneak into the steeple and set the bells pealing. Finally police and British troops climbed to the roof in pursuit and stationed a guard in the steeple. Only in the Turkish and Ar menian sections of Cyprus' cities were there any shops or other businesses functioning during the strike. The island colony's Turkish origin minority of about 100,000 opposes Enosis, claiming that if British rule is ended the island must revert to Turkey whi c h ceded it to Britain in 1878. The much smaller Armenian minor ity has taken no stand. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Froth 'Handouts' To Be Available Tomorrow—Again It's happened again. Froth, fear ful of not selling all its copies, is going to try giving them away. Tomorrow morning between 10 and 11 a.m., the first 75 people who live within a ten-mile radius of Altoona will receive their copy of Froth at the Corner Room for nothing. This month Froth will take a jab at fraternities. Termed the 'Dirty Toga' issue, Froth will blast fraternity life in general. Froth girl of the month is Millis Mershon, junior in arts and let ters from Kennett Square. Froth can be purchased by those 'unfortunate' people who live other than in Altoona at the Het zel Union desk, Waring Hall, The Corner Room, the bulletin board on the Mali, and at the corner of Shortlidge and Burrowes, a new distribution point. FMA to Hold Annual Meet At Delta Chi The annual meeting of the Fraternity Marketing Association,, will be held at 7:30 p.m. on March 26 at Delta Chi fraternity, it was reported Monday at a meeting of the board of directors. Representatives from each member organization will elect officers and a board of directors will hear reports from officers and standing committees. Harold Perkins, chairman of the board, reported that business is well above last year's. A volume of $llO,BOO was re corded since September, while the volume for the same period last year was $74,000, he said. The business was in canned and frozen foods and meats. The board will publish a news letter for the first time about the middle of April. It is to be pub lished once this semester and regularly next year. The newsletter, which will be directed at member organizations, will contain buying tips and other useful information. Delta Sigs Resume Meals in Fraternity The members of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity, whose house was partially destroyed by fire in De cember, resumed a regular sched ule of meals in their house Mon day. They are now living in Pollock Dormitory 4 but expect to fully occupy their house in about two weeks. Meanwhile, construction on the damaged portions of the house is progressing. Firewalls are being installed for the first time and a sprinkling system is being built into the basement and main floors. Mills Orders Student Held for County Court A twenty-three year old stu dent was ordered held for Centre County Court on a sodomy charge after a hearing Monday before Justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills. The student was arrested by State College police at 2:15 a.m. Monday. Mills explained that law does not allow a justice of the •peace to set bail in a sodomy case. Rain, Possibly Snow Predicted for Today The forecast for today is con siderable cloudiness with rain or perhaps snow, according to the students in the department of meteorology. The predicted high is 38 de grees. The low around 30. Yester ay's maximum was 36 while the low was 29. There was .15 inch precipitation. rgiatt Spring Week Committee Plans Trophy Reduction; Charity to Get Benefits The number of Spring Week trophies to be given this year has been greatly reduced, according to Richard Seng, Spring Week Committee chairman. Members of the committee decided to reduce the number because they felt that the money which was to go to charity should not be poured into trophies in such a large amount. Approximately 40 trophies were awarded last year as compared to the expected 16 for this year. A tentative list of trophies has been set up by the committee. The approximate total cost will be $3OO, compared to about $7OO spent last year, Seng reported. This year's list of trophies will include one for the all around Spring Week winner, one for Miss Penn State, three for first place winners in the Mad Hatter's Parade, 'one for the first place winner in the He-Man contest, three for the first place carnival winners, three for the second place carnival winners, four for the runners up to Miss Penn State, and four or five medals for the runners up to the winner of the He-Man contest. Seng also announced that there would be a change in the ticket program for the carnival this year. He said that groups would only be allowed to charge one ticket admission for their show. Tickets to Cost 10 Cents Tickets will cost 10 cents as in previous years, he said. He went on to say that groups that sell food will have their charge set according to its worth. He emphasized the point that the entire show, not-just one part, was to cost one 10 cent ticket, and added that checkers will make sure that addioional tickets are not charged after entry. Song said that application forms for the carnival booths will re quire that organizations draw a plan to scale of their booth plans. Booths will have a 30 foot front age and will be 30 feet long. Ap plications must also include, ac cording to Seng, the number of students who will participate, a description of costumes, and a de tailed description Of the show and its theme. Cabinet to Screen The 1955-56 All-University Cab inet and the Spring Week Com mittee will screen applications, Seng reported. Last year, he said, (Continued on page eight) Jeannie Risler Presents 'Phaedra' Jeannie Risler followed up four years of producing dra matic entertainment in Players with a powerful portrayal of an emotoinally-racked Greek queen in her graduate thesis production of "Phaedra" last night. Playing the lead role as well as directing the Frenchman Racine's adoption of a Greek legend, Miss Risler practically carries the play's drama on her) shoulders as she trembles andiler, rather than the reverse as heaves, sighs, and cries in anguishlhe thought. This is the theme of throughout the performance. the drama and this theme dis- Ably backing her up in thelrupts the lives of all the major mood of the play is Clyde Gorelcharacters in one day as every who in portraying Theseus, heriGreek drama should. husband, returns fro) a war after Being a play of pure passion, being reported as killed, and sor- one expects to see its characters rowfully and angrily reacts to:caught up in the thros of this events which eventually find him: passion, contorting their faces ands losing his wife and son he had a!bodies and achieving voice effects few hours before the show endeddonly allowed in tragic moments, A powerful scene is effected!of which there are many. when Gore confronts Miss Eisler' Only Miss Risler and Gore with accusations of adultery, leav-,achieve this goal. Tayler, a sec .ing her shaken and distraught'ondary pivotal person in the :while he paces about in a fearful show, has the voice (striking and haze of disgust, as well he might, clear) and the looks (he looks since the third party is his son like the conception of a Greek by a former marriage. hero) but lacks what is termed But on this point he was mis—"stage movement." .informed. His wife loved his son,' In spots where he should Hippolytus, played by Bruce Tay- (Continued on page five) Wickersham Wins First In Ag Finals Edward Wickersham, junior in dairy science from \Vest Grove. speaking on "Agriculture Re. defined' won first prize last night in the' finals of the Agricultural Student Council speaking con. test. Wickersham was selected front a group of five finalists by judges Dale Drum, speech instructor; E. J. Brown, associate professor of rural sociology and agricultur. al extension; and W. R. Davey, assistant professor in dairy sci ence. Each speaker talked for ap proximately seven minutes. Wilkens in 2nd Second place went to Robert Wilkins, senior in general agri culture from Jackson Center, who spoke on "So You Want Better Beef." Sylvia Kaley, sophomore in ag ricultural economics and rural sociology from Pittsburgh, speak ing on "Rabbits—Domestic and Foreign" won third prize. David A. Morrow. senior in dairy science from Tyrone, won fourth prize speaking on "Let's Sell Milk." Fifth prize was won by Walter Edelen, senior in horticulture from Erie, speaking on "Farm Safety." Elecitions Held Norman Schue, junior in dairy science from Hanover, was elect ed president of agricultural stu dent council in elections which preceeded speech finals. David R. Allison, junior in forestry from York, was elected (Continued on page eight) By TED SERRILL Court Order See Page 4 FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers