Today's Foreca. Fair and Warm , High 70-73 VOL. 57. No. 137 Better L Air Serv Request! The State College Authority last night file a request with the Penn sylvania Aeronautics Commis sion for better airline service to the area. The request will go through the commission to the Civil Aero nautics Board. M. K. Gingrich, vice chairman of the authority, said the group would ask that more airline flights be scheduled in the State College vicinity. The authority is investigating the prospect of an airport to serve State College. The area is cur rently served by Black Moshan non Airport, 28 miles from State College. ' An increase in local airline ser vice would have to' be handled by the Black-Moshannon Airport. However, if a proposed airport closer to State College Were built, it could probably take much of the airline traffic from the other airport. The authority also decided to publish the results of a survey taken among the University ad ministration and among towns people concerning travel by air. The survey investigated the amount of air travel by mem bers of the University administra tion from September through De cember of last year, State College businessmen and townspeople were questioned concerning the amount of travel by air they did during the whole of last year. The survey also questioned these three sources concerning an ticipated yearly air travel if there were an airport located within 10 miles of State College. Beatty to Name Ag Committees A library improvement com mittee and a driveway improve ment committee will be appointed by Russell Beatty, president of the Agriculture Student Council, at' the council meeting at 7 to night in 212-213 Hetzel Union. The library improvement com mittee will work with Dr. David R. McClay, acting associate dean and acting director of resident instruction, on the improvement of conditions in the agriculture library. The driveway committee will study the possibility of paving the driveway behind Armsby and Weaver. At the last council meeting Jean Poole, secretary, suggested that a separate committee be ap pointed to work on each physical improvement project. She said that she believed there was too much work for one standing physical improvement committee. AIM May Switch Indie Week to Fall A move to change Indie Week, formerly National Independent Students Association Week, from •the latter days of the spring se mester to Homecoming Week end in the fall semester, will be discussed at tonight’:: meeting of the Association of Independent Men Board of Governors. The board will meet at 7 "to night in 203 Hetzel Union. A committee headed by Law rence Kowalski, junior in arts and letters from Hazleton, will present its report on the Indie Week change. The week is cur rently held late in the spring semester. . Pollock 'Meeting Postponed • The. Pollock • Council meeting scheduled for 6:30 tonight has been postponed until 6:30 next Wednesday. . | Sljf iailylH (Enll Chivalry Is Dead! teal ice id Airport loved to —Daily Collegian Photo by Marty Scherr HE RIDES, SHE WALKS. Spring does strange things, but does not affect Jay English enough to induce him to give up his trans portation. Kathy Bell walks beside her boy friend on their way home from school. Both are ninth graders at Stale College Junior High School. 1956 Seating Plan To Be Used Again The Beaver Field seating plan for the fall football season will remain essentially the same as the 1956 plan, Edward M. Czekaj, Athletic Association assistant business manager, said yesterday. Students will be allowed to sit in any seat in any section reserved for their class and the seats will be filled on a first come, first-serve basis The combination matriculation athletic event card will be used as a ticket, with a number des ignated for each of the four home contests. If the card is lost, the student will have to secure an other one costing $lO if he wishes to have the athletic book privi leges. 27.820 Seats Available The University body takes up approximately 13,744 of the total 27,820 permanent seats. Only one ticket will be available per stu dent,- except married students. They will be able to buy one ex tra ticket to entitle them a seat in the same section. Seniors and full-time graduate students will sit in sections EK, EJ, EH and EG, which extends Labor Com Corruption WASHINGTON (ff) Or ganized labor’s own clean-up squad today sifted corruption charges against officials of the Bakery Workers Union. This is a matter due to get attention soon at hearings before Senate rackets investigators. . The closed session by the AFL CIO’s five-man ethical practices committee, which recessed its bakers’ probe until May 25, was outwardly uneventful except for a verbal tiff later between rival attorneys. Meantime Sen. John L. McCel lan (D.-Ark.), chairman of the Senate committee investigating improper labor-management ac tivities, announced postponement of scheduled New York City area hearings from mid-May until at least mid-June. McClellan ordered the delay FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE .COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. MAY 8. 1957 from the 50-yard line to the goal line in the- east stands. Juniors will sit in sections NK, NL and NM, which are situated in the end zone in the east stands; soph omores will sit in sections iNB, NC, ND and NB, the end zone seats in the east and west stands; and freshmen will sit in sections NF, NG, NH and NJ, centered behind the goal posts. Czekaj also announced that 60,000 application blanks for sea son tickets will be mailed June 1 to alumni, season ticket holders and the general public. Applica tion blanks have already been mailed to the faculty members and university employees. (Continued on page eight) after consulting with the Justice Henry J. Kaiser, attorney for Department. He said it was felt Curtis R. Sims, the suspended sec-' improper to probe the New York retary of the Bakeiy Workers’; area situation during the trial, Union, told newsmen the recess of s due to start within a few days, of the Ethical Practices Committee i Johnny Dio Dioguardi, New York until May 25 was requested by; racketeer . James il Rowe, attorney for' Dio is under indictment in con- James G. Cross, the union presi-l nection with the acid blinding a dent. ; year_ago of labor columnist Vic- Cross tor Riesel. To Begin June 15 McClellan, said he expects the New York’ hearings to start around June 15, with Dio due to be “an important witness.” Other sources reported that the Senate committee probably will hold open hearings on Bakery Workers Union rackets charges in the interval before the New York hearings get under way. The Senate committee is due to question Teamster Union Presi dent Dave Beck again tomorrow on his handling of that union’s funds. Blanks to Be Sent ittee Investigates Baker's Union egiatt Frosh Suspended For Hitting Prof A freshman in the College of Engineering and Architec ture has been suspended from the University for striking ant instructor after being accused of cheating in a bluebook. The suspension, which has been approved by the Senate subcommittee on disciplinary action, is effective at the end of the semester. The student may apply for readmittance for the spring semester next year. The student has also been dropped from the course and will receive a failing grade.' This ac tion was taken by Norman R. Sparks, head of the Department] of Mechanical Engineering. Perkins Describes incident The incident, according to Har old W. Perkins, assistant dean of; men, happened like this: The student was taking a blue book in a class taught by E. Wil-I liam Beans, instructor in mechan- 1 ical engineering. The students were permitted to. use a chart in the back of the I book during the test. The chart| could be removed from the book' The student, sitting in the first row, had an open book on the seat beside him. Beans noticed this and presumed the student was cheating. Beans then accused the student of cheating and lifted his blue book. The student protested that he was not cheating and used “abusive language.” Tears Bluebook Then Beans tore up the blue book and the student struck him. Perkins said the subcommittee decided the case mainly on the student’s action after being ac cused of cheating. In the ma jority of cheating cases, the sub committee spends much of its time hearing evidence as to whe ther the student was cheating. This case, which involved the 'striking of the instructor, was a little different, Perkins said. ! Regular cheating cases are di vided into three classifications— presumably unpremeditated, pre-l meditated, and cooperative pre-j meditated cheating involving col lusion. The severeness of the pen alty depends upon the classifica- 1 tion. Schoonmaker Will Head National Angel Flight Patricia Schoonmaker. junior in arts and letter's from Tyrone, has been elected first national' commander of Angel Flight, s which has recently become a na tional organization. The University was selected to become the first national head quarters of the group. ; Miss Schoonmaker is also com mander of the University’s Angel Flight. Sluarl Accused , Cross and George Stuart, who, has resigned as vice president of. WOTCt the union, stand accused by Sims, Dr. Edward C. Thaden, assis of having misappropriated union’tant professor of history, has been funds. j awarded a Fulbright grant for The Bakery Workers' Union j^ e 957*58 academic year to do executive board has absolved research mßussian cultural his- Cross and Stuart but has sus . tory at the University of Hel<=.nki, pended Sims because he took his H ?J sln ,£u Jutland. . . . .... charges to the newspapers and a specialist m 19th the McClellan committee century Russian history, hopes to tne Mccieuan con ™ lttee - visit the Soviet Union during his Sims has charged, among other I year abroad. He plans to leave thrngs, that Cross ran up $2,500 in!for Finland in September, ac phone calls on a union telephonelcompanied by his wife, tc a girl friend and accepted aj Dr. Thaden spent six weeks in union Cadillac car as his own. ithe Soviet Union last summer. ... But All One Hears .. . See Page 4 Court Fines Total $5473 This Year Students dropped a total of ss473'into the till in fines-levied by Traffic Court since Septem ber, $1723 more than the $3750 ithe court collected last year. The total does not include an 'additional $lO6 in fines levied Monday against 24 persons. The money collected from fines goes to the All-University Cab inet Scholarship Fund. Fines Breakdown The fines levied Monday in cluded $74 for traffic violations; $7 for failure to report to the Campus Patrol within one school day after the violation; and $25 for failure to register a vehicle or display a registration sticker. Nine of the violators were giv en suspended fines totalling $44. The court dismissed 11 cases. Ten persons failed to appear be fore the court and thus received automatic fines totalling $49. They will not have a right to appeal. Cars Suspended One student was ordered to send his automobile home for the remainder of the semester, and three others must keep their-cars ;off campus. | Traffic Court will meet two i more times this semester, on May 13 and 20, when both new and old members will sit. Owen Proc ter, junior in business adminis [tration from Irwin, has been [named next year’s chairman.' Warm Weather Scorches Lion The Nittany Lion has gone in to seclusion in his cave today after reluctantly withdrawing from the “World’s Most Perfect Lion” contest. \ The Lion declares the reason ifor his retreat from the compe tition was that he strained his -»~ good paw while lifting 500_lb. - weights. Ho w- ■■ ■ n ever woodland —_ . —i sources say yes- ~ -ft— terday’s fair weather tempted 1 the Lion to “test- vSSuyxsf drive” his new —l** French sportscar • 1 — _ to V/ hip p 1 e’s 1 Dam v. here the bright sun gave the Lion a bad case of sunburn and freckles. ; It is reported that the Lion is [“resting comfortably.” surround ed by electric fans blowing over i large buckets of ice. Thaden Receives Fulbr* ht A FIVE CENTI