Today's Forecast: Snow Flurries VOL 57. No. 84 Town Police Nab Minor With Beer A studenjt was arrested by State College police at about 8 p.ra. Wednesday for viola tion of the state liquor law on minors. The student, Patrick W. Dowl ing, freshman in electrical engi neering from Kingston, was ar rested by police when he was seen carrying beer out of a State College establishment. No Decision Made He had a hearing at 3 p.m. yes terday before Justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills. No decision has been made on the case as yet. Five students received $7 fines yesterday afternoon for traffic violations. <■ Mark W. Willensky, freshman in business Tadministration from Scranton, was fined for parking too close to the intersection of Foster Ave. and S. Allen St. Don A. Kinsey, junior in ani mal husbandry from Quakertown, was parked on the sidewalk in Legion Alley. More Violators Ronald G. Kinch, sophomore in civil engineering from Denver, was fined for parking against traffic at 200 S. Pugh St. Alexander M. Milligan, senior in arts and letters from Pitts burgh, was fined for parking against traffic in front of 100 W. Beaver Ave. Ronald A. Kolb, junior in the Division of Intermediate Regis tration from Philadelphia, was fined for a similar offense. He was parked against traffic at 200 Fairmount Ave. 797 Polio Shots Given Students Seven hundred and ninety seven Salk polio vaccine shots have been given to University students to date, according to Dr. Herbert R. Glenn, director of the Health Service. Supplies of the vaccine will be available indefinitely at the In firmary. Any undergraduate or graduate student in good health is eligible to receive the vaccine at $1 a shot. • Letters of parental permission, required for minors, must be sent directly to the Health Service and must be postmarked from the stu dent’s hometown. Dr. Glenn said that many students bring their permission slips directly to the Infirmary. These are invalid. The Salk vaccination program has been in operation since Christmas. Senate Committee Reviews Probation The University Senate Subcom mittee on Discipline this morning will consider recommendations of probation against 15 students for gambling in the residence halls. The recommendations were handed down Tuesday night by the Association of Independent Men Judicial Board of Review. The students were involved in three separate cases. Disciplinary probation was recommended for eight of the students, judicial pro bation for' six others and office probation for another. Grad Student's Condition Is Reported Improved The condition of Ira Starer, graduate student in chemistry from Brooklyn, N.Y. is improved according -to the University Hos pital. Starer was sent to the hospital Tuesday night with bums and possible respiratory poisoning after an explosion in Walker Lab oratories where he was working. ®lte Daily 0| (Eoll STATE COLLEGE. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 15. 1957 Student Gets Clipped But Makes a Profit Yul Brynner’s bald head may be worth a million dollars to him, but Pollock Dorm 3 is giving them away for $lO. Last Friday night when Budd Goldberg, freshman in applied arts from Williamsport, got into a bull session about Yul Brynner he didn’t dream he would come out with a bald head. Goldberg made the statement “For $lO I would shave my head too,” and his dorm buddies took him" up on it. “Before I knew what happened, the fellows in the dorm made me sign an affidavit to that effect. They all gathered in the lounge and collected the $10,” he said. With the money in his hand, five of Budd’s friends began to work on him. One used electric clippers for awhile, two more used electric razors and finally two more used ■sr- Budd Goldberg The Campus Yul Brynner safety razors and shaving cream. The finished product was one shiney bald head. That very night, Goldberg went to see the motion picture “Anas tasia.” He wanted to see just what his famous counterpart looked like. While he was at the movie, some coeds happened to notice “Yul Brynner” Goldberg and took a fancy to him. As soon as Goldberg reached his dormitory, he had a phone call and a new girl friend. For those men who have troub les “slaying” the coeds, Pollock Dorm 3 will be happy to make you irresistible. Medical Bills Exceed $lO,OOO 'S' Club, Collegian Start Fund To Aid Badly Injured Athlete By FRAN FANUCCI Collegian Sports Editor The Varsity “S” Club in co operation with the Daily Col legian and University offi cials has begun a fund-raising drive for Dick Kadis, Geneva College football player who was seriously injured in a game Sept. 29 against Waynesburg. Kadis has been virtually un conscious for over four months. He lies in a Cleveland Hospital unable to recognize members of his family and only able to open his eyes a few times a day. Since Sepl. 29 his medical bills have exceeded $lO,OOO. Geneva has no insurance cover ing such accidents and has been able to raise only $lOOO in an attempt to defray the expenses. The Varsity “S” Club, in order FOR A BETTER PENN STATE By GEORGE HARRISON Pro OK'd For SAM, Kappa Sig The subcommittee on discipline of the Senate Committee on Stu dent Affairs yesterday approved | a recommendation to place Sigma i Alpha Mu and Kappa Sigma fra-l ternities on five weeks social pro bation for violating the freshman minor drinking ban. The social probation, which goes into effect today, was recom mended Tuesday by the Inter fraternity Council Board of Con trol. The board also placed the fraternities on three weeks Board of Control probation immediately following the social probation. Recommends Suspension The subcommittee also approved a board recommendation that the rushing privileges of the two freshmen involved in the viola tion be suspended for a full year. Richard Shillinger, chairman of the board, said their case would be referred to the Association of Independent Men Judicial Board of Review. r'l ’ •' O : According to Shillinger, IFC checkers found the freshmen drinking at a joint party at the Sigma Alpha Mu fraernity house. Negligent Violation During social probation, the fraternities hold no social func tions whatsoever. The Board of Control probation involves a strict surveillance of the fraterni ties by members of the IFC board. The drinking ban violation was one of negligence rather than a deliberate breaking of the code, Shillinger said, and for this rea son the board did not recommend the full eight weeks social pro bation which was indicated as the likely penalty when the ban was approved by- IFC last Sept. 18. j Chem-Phys Newsletter The Chem-Phys Newsletter will be distributed in the chemistry and physics buildings, according to David Beebe, editor. - The main feature will be a story on the new dean of the col lege, Dr. Ferdinand G. Brick wedde. to aid the stricken Kadis Family, has obtained permission from the University to take charge of the skating rink next Tuesday, Wed nesday, and Thursday, with all profits going to the Kadis Fund. Price of admission will be 50 cents, although a donation of over 50 cents is encouraged. Students, faculty, and townspeople are in vited to any of these three dates. Mr*. Marilyn .Tammen, Uni ted Stales and California junior pair skating champion in 1947 and now an instructor at the rink, will put on a skating ex hibition each night as an added attraction. All money collected will be sent to the Kadis family. Th: 21-year old student is suffering from a cerebral hemorrhage and is listed in “poor” condition. His father, a Cleveland restaurant owner, has eniatt Senate Spring The Senate Committee on Student Affairs has thrown a snag in the Spring Week program suggested to All-Univer sity Cabinet by refusing to give its approval to the main event of the program, the music festival. Robert Krakoff, Spring Week chairman, told Cabinet last night in his report that the Senate group felt the festival was too much of an extravaganza and was not a tme educational endeavor. The Senate group also felt that; the risk involved would be too; great, he said. They were afraid, the entertainers would present i the show to a small audience and) Cabinet would lose money, Kra-' koff said. i Answers Questions | Krakoff answered questions on the music festival at a meeting [of the Senate Group. Krakoff said he was complimented on his defense of reasons for having a music festival. It seemed to have little effect on the decision of Senate Group, he said after the Cabinet meeting. The festival would have been the first of its kind to be held in central Pennsylvania. The ten tative program drawn up by Kra koff called for the festival to in clude stage, radio and TV person alties. Spring week contest winners would have received their tro phies at the festival. Life magazine was reported to have been interested in covering the festival, Krakoff said. The festival was scheduled to be held at Beaver Field Thursday, May 2, in Spring Week. An audience of approximately 30,000 was antici pated. Alternale Plan Sought Krakoff said the Senate Group did not oppose some sort of alter nate program for Thursday night. He suggested the following: 1. Tone down the festival some what and bring it indoors to Rec reation Hall. 2. Drop the idea and bring in a jazz package. It would include small groups representing dif ferent types of jazz. j 3. Have another Fred Waring i show. Waring is reported to be 1 interested in presenting another show at the University. 1 4. Present the Spring Week contestants with their trophies in doors without other entertain ment. Richard Schriger, president of Liberal Arts Student Council, suggested that Cabinet sponsor! the Harlem Globetrotters. borrowed $3OOO so far but hasn’t! much hope of raising the rest. For Geneva to raise $lO,OOO seems vir tually impossible. Cliff Aultman, Geneva athletic director, said: “We’ll do every thing we can. We used to have an insurance policy but it was only for $5OO an accident. In four years three different companies han dled our insurance, each one dropping us. We didn’t quit them, they dropped us.” Kadis' medical bills, however, continue to mount, which is the paramount reason the Varsity "S" club has stepped in and started ihis fund. Club president Paul Roberts said yesterday: “The money col lected from Penn State students and faculty will not only help alleviate Kadis’ expenses, but also help bring good will to our cam pus and to State College.” Unit Axes Festival By TERRY LEACH UN Defeats Red Demand For Debate UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Feb. 14 (JP) —The UN Steering Commit tee beat down today a Soviet de mand for. immediate Assembly debate on the Eisenhower doc trine and other alleged aggressive acts by the United States. The committee voted 8-6 against ;the Russian move after U.S. Chief ; Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., i denounced the complaint as “stu iPidly false” and a "gigantic cock and bull story.” I Lodge, however, conformed to ithe standing U.S. policy in favor 2 lr i n § charges against the j United States. He voted with the [Soviet delegation for a debate. [Others voting for debate were Czechoslovakia, Egypt, India and ! Britain. [ Countries voting against were Nationalist China, Denmark, Do minican Republic, El Salvador, [France, Italy, Peru and Turkey. [Pakistan abstained and the 16th i committee member, Prince Wan ;Waithayakon of Thailand, Assem bly president, did not take part in :the voting. [ Lodge said the United States did not object to inscription of ,the proposed item on the Assem bly agenda "in the belief that [membership in the United Na tions gives every member govern ment the right to make a fool of ! himself if he wants to, and that is a right of which the Soviet Union m this case has taken complete ; advantage.” ! The final decision is up to the 80-nation Assembly. Soviet Dep uty Foreign Minister Vassily V. Kuznetsov is expected to renew his demand when the Assembly .takes up the report of the steer ling committee. Snow to Keep Lion in Hiding I With a forecast of more snow flumes beginning late this after noon or this evening, it is doubt ful whether the missing Nittany Lion will attempt the long trip down from the mountains within ; the next few • » | days. j This presents the Lion's friends with tire prospect of a weekend without a den party, wh iah could seriously dent the morale of the Centre County small game population. A few members of the group yesterday visited some of the better-known Belle- Ifonte night spots, but were told '.that the Lion has not been seen I since he tore the front door off [the County Courthouse last Sat lurday night. Today’s snow flurries should be accompanied by a drop in tem perature. The low tonight is pre dicted between 15 and 17 degrees. The high today should be around 30. Music Festival See Page 4 FIVE CENTS . . •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers