(11:11r Batt VOL. 58. No. 14 STATE COLLEGE. P Three Soph In Auto Cr Three University students , from Pittsburgh are in Tyrone Hospital following an auto crash Sunday night nine miles east of Tyrone. The accident was one of. four involving University students 'ov er the weekend. None of the three students are in serious condition. Judith Trench, 19, sophomore arts and letters, the most ser- usly injured, received a fracture the left clavicle and dislocation the left humerus. Her condi on is fair. . . Diane Morrocco, 19, sophomore education, is in good condition om cuts of the forehead. She is •ing treated for shock. Robert -ifeld, 19, sophomore in electri er inr -; ^ 1 1, is in fair condi- BUCKY PAOLONE. Lion halfback, is hit by two unidentified Penn defenders as he attempts to pick up yardage through the left side of the Penn Victory Proves Gridders Need Work By VINCE CAR9CCI Sports Editor If nothing,else, Penn State's 19-14 victory over Perm_Sat urday afternoon -at Franklin Field proved that Coach Rip Engle wasn't fooling when he gloomily said - last • week at a pregame pep rally: "We still have a lot of work to do." Engle and his staff—and prob ably the team:—realized this last week. The Lion fans found out for themselves Saturday after noon somewhat shockingly, we might add after watching the vastly-improved Quakers rebound from a two-touchdown deficit to turn an expected romp into a closely contested battle. After the game. Engle again Band Day Tickets Will Go on Sale Aproximate 1500 football ticke p ts for the lY band day game between Penn State and Wil liam and Mary will go on sale at 8:15 a.m. tomorrow at the ticket office, Recreation Hall. Ticket manager Edward Cse kaj said the tickets. priced at S 4. will be on sale from 8:15 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4:30 P.m. weekdays and from 8:15 a.m. to noon Saturdays. The tickets are for seats near the 25-yard line. 1"ti l / * • \\ 1 . tiVNO 1' D I ) C tk . 'klet N ! . / k i. _IC 285 .1:.1147 Eh, :5,-. A BETTER PENN STATE . TUESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 1. 1957 FIVE CENTS mores Injured lisit Near Tyrone rom head injuries. -Held and Misses Trench Morrocco were passengers car driven by George Haw ,.ne. junior in fhe division of Iseling from Oakdale. Haw ; ne and Jill Fine, sophomore -its and letters from Pitts- Pt, another passenger, were :ted at the hospital and re - to campus, police said the Hawthorne as struck by a car driven •ald R. Bretts of Philadel- University graduate, who , dly lost control of his car passing on a curve. aul by ph rej all :ts was traveling toward tome and, after passing an Ltified auto, went off his f the highway. Hawthorne netts swerved back onto the Id crashed into the left side —Daily Collegian Photo by George Harrison Quaker line. Pemi State's Sam Stellatella (62) is in the background. issued his warning statement: "I feel we still have a lot of work to do.. . . we're well be hind in many respects," he said in the Penn State locker.room. "And we're going to work . . . we just need 'more football," he said. "Penn was far more ready for the game than we were." This, undoubtedly, was a refer ence to the fact that Penn had one preseason • scrimmage—a gainst Rutgers—under its belt while the Lions had_ none. In reviewing the game from a Penn State angle, Engle com mended the play of quarterback Al' Jacks. "I liked Jacks' work . . I liked the way he ran the team," he said. Jacks, who was originally. ticketed only for duty wth Engle's starting unit, was forced -info action several times wh . the alternate unit when Penn started to make a game of it and experience was called for. Sophomore Rich Lucas was the alternate unit's quarterback Sat urday. And Jaiks' work was certain iry commendable. He engineered 24-yard touchdown drive in he early minutes of the first • aster after fullback Bill oung!s fumble of a pass from enter in a punt situation gave he Lions the ball. Halfback ave Kasperian capped the se en-play drive with a four-yard coring slant off right tackle. ullback Babe Caprara con (Continued an page seven) ClAirgiatt of his car. The Hawthorne vehi cle was pushed off the highway and against a tree about 10 feet from the road. Former State Sen. A. H. Letz ler of Houtzdale was one of the drivers in a three-car accident early Friday night. Police said he stopped for a slop sign on. Route 322 near Tusseyville when his auto was struck from behind by one driven by John Buchart. sophomore in chemis try from York. The Buchart car was struck from behind by a third vehicle. driven by Robert Brown, a student from Glen side. ' Damage to the front and rear the Buchart car totaled appro i mately $lOOO. Brown's auto r ceived $250 damage and Letzler $2OO. (Continued on page five) ~~ ~..• 2000 Books Unsold At Close of ÜBA TIM Council Elections The Used Book Agency report ed 2000 books remaining after thej Begin Today in HUB jbook sales closed. I Elections for Town Independent The agency took in 8500 books and sold 6500. More books were Men Council will be held from :turned in, but could not be sold 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomor- because of course changes. row in the Hetzel Union card The ÜBA began returning room. f money and unsold books yester- Persons desiring information day and will continue to do so about TIM may call President until Friday. Green slips given James Wambold, at AD 8-6537 or , out when the books were turned Raymond David at AD 8-0814. in must be presented when claim ing money and books. New ÜBA Judicial Board to Meet ( hours are from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Women's Student Govern-1 Books and money not claimed ment Association Judicial Hoardiwithin 30 days after the close of will meet at 5 p.m. today in 214Ithe book sale become the prop- Hetzel Union. lerty of the Book Exchange. Forces Cut at Little Rock School LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sept. 30 (VP) Barricades cam e down, bayonets were sheathed and .a bristling cordon of troops was drastically cut to day as the second week of in tegrated classes got under way at Central High School. - Nine Negro students strolled out into bright autumn sunshine at the end of their class day, un escorted for the first time since they were beseiged in the same school by rioting whites just a week ago. They talked and laugh ed together as they made their way to an Army vehicle that took them home. Armed helmeted paratroop guards were recalled from posts Leader Reiterates Request to Curb Student Drinking The University has received a letter sent to all colleges in the state by Gov. George M. Leader urging a crackdown on student drinking. The letter—a follow-up of a similar letter sent out last year—said the governor hopes the colleges are keeping the matter in mind. Wilmer E. henworthy, execu-i• • tive assistant to the President,!A said the University will acknow-' siatic Flu ledge receipt of the letter. President Eric A. Walker last I • October said he did not view nocu lotions drinking as a "terrific problem." The laws of the commonwealth. he said then, work for everyone, l. ,and no group at the University is TO rt Today exempt from them. Last year he also said "each ' , Inoculations against Asiatic flu student here has an extra re- will be given at the Health Center sponsibility as a member of this starting this morning. University. We expect students Shots will be given on a first 1 to refrain from disgracing the come basis and will cost $l. 1 University." The University's program is He said many students drank part of a nationwide prevention I before they came to the campus. f effort. Sporadic outbursts of the 'Thus, people ought to rea ize, lu have already been reporteddemic, in Walker said, that drinking is a parts i of i the country but the epi problem of population, wherever t there sgoing to be one, t ;it may be, and not a special habit is is not expected to reach the Uni- I bred on campus. ted States until December or Jan- Hel said no further restrictions, :were contemplated if fraternities. uar Y* :and other groups stayed within The first inoculations at the University were given Sept. 113 i the law and existing University regulations. and 17, with 636 students receiv , University policy is to frown , ing the vaccine. on drinking and it does not ap- ' The Health Service has ordered prove the use of alcoholic hey- ,7500 doses of the serum, but be erages by students or student ,cause of the great demand for it groups, according to the dean of ; throughout the country, only a men's office. .s ma I I amount at a time is re- The University expects students ceived• , ! vaccine favorably. If the student body accepts the to obey the laws of the state and the nation, n. y, enough will he ordered to immunize the entire Leader's letter requested the 1 cooperation of the President -i n student body, according to Dr. stamping out the serving of alto-Herbert R. Glenn, director of the , !holic beverages to minors on the Health Service. The vaccine is re :school campus and its neighbor—ported 70 per cent effective and hood." lis the only preventive. The state liquor code pro vides "it shall be unlawful for any individual to sell, furnish or give any liquor, malt or brewed beverages, or to permit any of the above beverages to be sold, furnished or given to any minor." Leader's crackdown on minor drinking will extend to state stores and other sellers of alco holic beverages. at each of the big school's en trances. Detachments inside and outside the school were sharply cut. The nearly solid lines of soldiers that ringed the school at one time were replaced with widely spaced two-man foot pa trols. An Army helicopter snug'led, down to a landing beside a play ing field where its motors drown ed out the squeals of white and Negro girls playing softball dur ing an outdoor gym class. Meanwhile, U.S. Dist. Judge Ronald Davies, 'whose court ml ing the regular -Army troops are enforcing, asked during the day to be relieved of his duties here. He was assigned here from North Dakota district earlier in the seg regation crisis. Judge Davies upheld an Arkan sas federal judge in ordering in tegration to proceed at Central Lion Predicts Possible Rains Today's prediction calls for warmer temperatures with possi ble showers. The expected high will range from 65-70 degrees. The warmer. weather failed to arouse the Nit t any Lion this morning. He apparently had bar ricaded the door to his cave and was recuperating from violent ex ertions. The Lion was watching the intramural foot ball games last night, when the football was ac cidentally kicked into his paws After watching baseball games all summer, the Lion assumed that the "foul" ball was his to Ikeep. In the violent chase which ensued, he was finally "downed" ,at the door to his cave. The teams, of course, showed little sense of humor about the whole thing, and the Lion was severely wounded, suffering lacer ations of the tail. High. His final ruling was in the form of an injunction that prohib ited Gov. Orval Faubus from us ing the National Guard to bar the nine Negroes from Central High. Chief Judge Archibald J. Gardner of the U.S. Circuit Conk! of Appeals, said Davies will be relieved at his own re quest "in a day or two." He will be replaced by U.S. Dist. Judge Roy W. Harper of St. Louis. Archibald said the shift was routine and without "signifi cance." However, Davies has, been the target of biting criticism by ,Gov. Faubus and others. During the day, Faubus contin ued to withhold a decision on whether to summon a special ses sion of the Arkansas State Legis lature. He said such a session was very likely. But he was known to be running up against apposition from lawmakers.
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