• Polls Until 9 Open Tonight VOL. 57. No ck Gets council dew Nur LA Pres Robert N )rock, junior from Elkins Par who two weeks ago declined nomination, last night was elected president .of the Liberal Arts Student Council. He was unopposed. . Nurock had declined the nomi nation to seek the Campus Party nomination for Ali-University Secretary=treasurer. He lost the nomination to Joseph Boehret. Robert Steele, Campus party nominee for All-University presi dent, also declined the nomina tion for council president at the meeting two weeks ago. Feldstein Elected VP Jay Feldstein, sophomore from Elizabeth, was elected vice presi dent. Feldstein defeated Richard Friedman, sophomore from Har risburg, by an 18-10 vote. Sandra Shogre n, sophomore from Pittsburgh, was elected sec retary-treasurer on the fourth ballot. Miss Shogren was opposed by Bonnie Keys, sophomore from Mt. Penn, and Lois Henderson, sophomore from Hazleton. The first ballot vote was 11-9-8. The second ballot ended in a 10-9-9 vote, making it necessary to hold ' a third ballot without dropping the low candidate. The third ballot vote was 12-9-7, and the low candidate, Lois Hender son, was dropped. Shogren Wins, 16-13 Miss Shogren.won the election, 16-13, on the last ballot David Steck, junior from Phila delphia, gave a committee report on the council election to be held April 3 and 4. Steck said that the committee is planning to have each candidate submit a photo graph. Photographs will be dis played on a poster at the polls. The polls will be located in West Halls and in the Hetzel Union Building. Patricia O'Neill, sophomore from Staten Island, N.Y., reported that the evaluation committee is (Continued on page eight) Lion Unmoved Despit Rain The Nittany Lion, still hoping for a possible victory in the All-' University elections, continued on with his vigorous campaigning despite the gentle mud-producing rain that greeted him this morn ing. According to r( cent tabulation: all the Lion en count for his ei forts are t w muddy, boots However, despif the' condition c his footware, th. candidate for All University presi dent co n tinuet on his way, seek. ing votes where, Today's weather calls for light rain ending early this morning, followed by cloudy conditions and cooler air tonight. The tempera ture will be between 40-45 de grees. Senate Kills Move To Exempt Texts The state Senate yesterday killed a proposed amendment to the sales tax bill which would ex empt text books from the levy. The amendment was introduced by Sen. To Hays (D.-Centre-Clear field). The party-line votes showed 22 Democrats voting for the' amendment and 27 Republi cans voting against it. The Senate approved the con tinuation of the sales tax at 3 per cent, also on a straight party line vote. :„ 4 -4,.....,..it: STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH 20. 1957 Did You - Vote Yet? —Daily Collegian Photo by Marty &herr ELECTIONS COMMITTEE chairman, Bill Johnson, explains the operation of the voting machine to Dale Smith, freshman in aero nautical engineering from Croyden. Lianne Cordero, member of elections committee, looks on. • 19 Projects Planned For Greek Work Day Nineteen community projects have been selected to date for this year's Greek Week work projects day on March 31, according to Iris Olbum and Robert Steele, co-chairmen. The co-chairmen said that although 19 projects have been arranged, they are hoping for additional ones. They esti mated that 500 persons will be needed for the projects that have been lined up Miss Olbum and Steele have been working with Eugene M. Fulmer, executive secretary of the State College Chamber of Commerce, to arrange these pro jects. Fifty-one fraternities and 23. sororities will participate in the work projects day, one of the highlights of Greek Week. - A mass meeting of fraternity and sorority projects represen tatives will be held 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the Hetzel Union Building. Assignments will be made at that time and the groups will receive instructions for the work projects. The projects so far are as fol lows: Sunset View Park, Holmes Fos ter Park, E. Fairmount Play ground, S. Hills Playground, Corl Open Threat o Emerges Over- JERUSALEM, March 19 (IP)—The open threat of a new war - emerged today from Israel's dismay at Gaza Strip and Aqaba Gulf developments since she turned over those battle-won territories to the United Na tions. • Prime Minister David Ben- Gurion said Israel's army will march against Egypt again if President Nasser "tries to block our historic and legal. passage into the Gulf of Aqaba." - It would be a black day on the moral conscience of the world if we had to move our army to defend our rights," he said. "We will do it only as a last resort. But if forced. we FOR A BETTER PENN STATE St. School, Woodycrest Play ground, Matternville School. Matternville Playground, Boats burg Playground, Westview Play ground, State College High School football field, Centre County Home, Bellefonte. Midget League ball field. located outside of State College. Nittany and Panorama Villages, residential playground areas, Lemont School. Prospect Ave. tennis courts. College Heights playground and Ferguson Township Lion's Club commun ity park, near Pine Grove Mills. Greek Week Committee The final meeting of the Greek Week general committee will be held at 7 tonight in 218 Hetzel Union. All members of the committee have been asked to attend by Gen eral Chairman Robert Nurock. Mideast War rael's Dismay will do it and do it effec tively." Ben - Gurion implied he hoped for backing from Pres ident Eisenhower—"an honor able man, a friend and a gen eral of arrnies"—on the basis of a letter Eisenhower dis patched to him during Israel's early March crisis over the final pullout orders. If there is no forthright ac tion by the United •Nations, Ben-Gurion said, the Eisen hower Doctrine "could cen tainly be used to halt such a little man as Nasser." "In his letter, the President stated we would have no re grets if we withdrew," Ben- Gurion said. "For me, this was more - valid than any treaty be tween nations. That was the word not only of the President of the United States, but of an rgtatt 970 Cast Ballots In Ist-Day Vote, Hitting New Low First-day voting in the spring elections slipped to a new low yesterday when only 970 students went to the polls. At stake in the elections are the All-University, senior and junior class and Athletic Association officers for next year. Not for at least five years has the voting fallen below 1000, and except for last year, i when 1575 students voted on the first day, the number has stayed well above 1800. Over 7 Per Cent The 970 figure represents a little over 7 per cent of the eli gible voters. Last year's first-day vote of 1575 accounted for 15.2 per cent of the voters. Spokesmen for the All-Univers-1 ity Elections Committee expressed' dismay at the low voting total and suggested that yesterday's off-and-on rain may, have been, partly responsible for the low figure The polls were open front 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. yesterday in the card room of the Hetzel Union Build ing and will remain open during the same hours today and tomor row. All students are eligible to vote and will be admitted to the polls .upon the presentation of a matriculation card for this semes ter. 342 Freshmen Voted The voting totals fell into des cending order by class, from the freshmen, who cast 342 ballots, to the 103 seniors who voted. Sophomores, who are electing next year's junior class officers, cast 304 votes. Juniors, who are filling the senior class offices. cast 221 ballots. Voting was heaviest during the afternoon hours, according to Wil liam Johnson, Elections Commit tee chairman. An estimated 500 students cast their ballots during that time.-- 300 At Polls Before Noon Committee members estimated that less than 300 students ar rived at the poll's between 8 a.m. and noon, and that about 150 students voted during the evening hours. Four voting machines, one for each class, are set up in the HUB cardroom. Students may vote a straight party ballot by pulling a lever heading a party or column or they may split their tickets by pulling the individual levers beside each nominee's name. WSGA Senate to Meet The Women's Student Govern ment Association Senate will meet at 6:30 tonight in 213 Hetzel Un ion to discuss how it can help the newly-elected Senate. honorable man, a friend and a general of armies. He said that is the reason he sent Foreign Minister Golda Meir on her latest mission to the United States—to make clear to Eisenhower and to UN Secretary Genera} Dag Ham marskjold - that Israel will in sist on "freedom from terror on the Gaza border and free dom of passage through both the Suez Canal and the Aqaba Strait of Tiran." The interview—one in a series Ben-Gurion gives to news agencies and news mag azines on an alternating basis —went beyond his previous public warnings. He told his Parliament last Wednesday Israel would con sider herself free to act on her own if Egypt took over the Gaza Strip from UN forces. Nasser's Quandary See Page 4 Airport Site Sought By 2 Boroughs The Airport Authorities of State College and Dußois have decided to work together in trying to ob tain an airport for the Centre County area rather than a state favored one at Philipsburg, ac cording to D'r. M. K. Gingrich. vice chairman of the State Col lege Authority. Dr. Gingrich said the state de cided in 1956 to erect the airport at Philipsburg—as a proposed en largement of Black Moshannon Airport—with or without federal aid. County Site Favored State College and Dußois, Dr. Gingrich said, favor an airport in Centre County, since an air port at Black Moshannon would be of little value to the county, it being tou far away. The State College and Dußois Authorities held a meeting last night at Clearfield at which they were to devise _a joint working plan to better deal with the situ ation. Hope For Aid Both Authorities are hoping that th e federal government, which is now conducting a survey for a possible site in the area, will favor the Centre County area for aid under the National Airport Plan. A survey for opinions on an air port is presently being conducted in State College by the Authority. This survey has already been com pleted among residents, and the surveying of businessmen is now under way. Student injured In Auto Crash Glenn Weidler, freshman in pre veterinary from Palmyra, re ceived head and body wounds in a $l5OO automobile accident early yesterday morning. Weidier was taken to the Cen tre County Hospital with a punc ture wound of the left side of the head and brush burns and abras ions of the right shoulder and right side of the face after he failed to make a curve near a railroad crossing west of Miles burg. The car went off the road to the left, hit a railroad signal standard and a utility pole and skidded on for more than 100 feet. Two other persons were in the car, but they escaped injury. Stop Sign Placed On Locust Lane A third stop sign has been erected at Locust Lane and E. Beaver Ave. to halt northbound vehicles traveling on Locust Lane. A warning has been posted ahead of the sign. Cars coming over the hill at Highland Ave. will be able to see the warning sign. This makes the second new stop sign in a month posted by the borough. The other one was put up at S. Pugh St. and E. Beaver Ave. _ FIVE CENTS