The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 02, 1957, Image 1

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    Today's F
recast:
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VOL. 58. No. 3
UN Ends Debate
o _
• e •
-.• • • i Lions, WO
On Turkish Crisis i
i i mr , T ,
eet in ossup
• •
With,Syrian Consent, By VINCE CAROCCI ' lavage and Bob Bice: halfback Shopa Is Out wuh zillg; - .l:ne head
- , Sports Editor Bucky Paolone: and fullbacks aches.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Nov. 1 (il 3 )—The UN abruptly.
i Penn State's Nittanv Lion. Babe Caprara and Ben Williams. ! No official word has been re
ended its debate on the Turkish-Syrian crisis today after..
lootball team plays its last teal previously announced, Engle calved on the West Virginia
Syria announced it was ready to leave the problem for the: go with the same personnel lineup but it is expected that
present without any action. ,home game of the 1957 season on his two units that showed up Coach Art Lewis will go with
so well against Syracuse last week almost the same lineup that
- Syria's decision was part of a formula, worked out behind; th i s afternoon when it enter- with the excepti on of three posi-; opened against William & Mary
the scenes, to avoid a showdown in the bitter two-week dis - itains the Mountaineers of ,tions—quarterback, right guard, last week.
- - cussion. It was generally hailed; West -- - .
way virginia atßeaverField and the alternate unit fullback., That means that junior Dick
by delegates as a satisfactory , These changes were necessary: Longfellow will get the opening
out of a controversy which had:in a game rated a tossup by the because of injuries and illness.' call at quarterback—the most hot
sharply divided the world organ-' experts. Sophomore Rich Lucas will runt ly contested of the Mountie posi
ization. i Kickoff time is set for 1:30 p.m. first-team quarterback in place, tions.
The problem was left on the; For the Lions , the encounter of the injured Al Jacks; litchi& Senior Mickie Trimarki was the
agenda of the 82-nation Assembly,' marks the final home appear- 'McMillen returns to his starting Mountaineer starting quarterback
but Syria said it would not press: ance of their college careers post at right guard in 'place of: last season but has been pushed
its demands for an inquiry into, for 13 seniors—ends Jack Farts, the injured Willard (Bull) Smith,' roughly for the job this season
its complaint that the United Paul North, Ron Markiewicz, who pulled a ligament in his kneel by Longfellow. In fact, in the
States was prodding Turkey to-! Romeo Panozzo and Les Wal- against the Orange; and either: three games that Lion scout and
ward an attack on Syria. 1 tens: guards Dick McMillen, Ben Williams or Maurice SchleHAssistant Coach J. T. White saw
A seven-nation group acted : Captain Joe Sabol and Skip cher will replace Pete Shopa at i West Virginia play, Longfellow
similarly on its own counter- ! Stellfox: centers Charlie Rus- the alternate unit fullback post! (Coatinued on page seven)
proposal to put Secretary Gen- 1 - -
eral Dag Hammarskjold into the :
Sorauf Says Yes -
situation, if needed, as a medi- I Quartet Tickets
ator, i •
At a news conference later, Syr-: • . •
ian Foreign Minister Salah Biter,
declared his mind was not placed, Communists: Permit .
still Available
,
at rest by the statement of Nikital .
Khrushchev, Soviet Communist! . Program Listed
party boss, that there would bei
no war. Bitar said Syria was en-; em to Teach? A total of 375 tickets will be
dangered as long as Turkish troops. available and on sale Monday for
concentrate near the Syrian-Turk-! By BONNIE JONES the Hungarian Quartet concert,
I
ish frontier. , scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Monday
Although it is "an anguishing subject" to consider, Com-i
Biter said the United States in Schwab
Auditorium.
mistakenly considered the Syr- : munists should be allowed to teach, according to Dr. Frank J.I Doors will open at 8 p.m.
ian-Turkish dispute as part of ,
the cold war. Asked about the Sorauf, assistant professor of political science. Tickets will be available from
Soviet -support of the Syri d : an 1 .9 a.m. to noon and from Ito S
position. Biter said Syria coul
Sorauf spoke to the College of Business Administration , p.m. at the Hetzel Union desk..
Inot prevent any state, "great ; Graduate Club Thursday night on "What Is a Scholar?" without charge to students upon
or small," from voicing its posi- 1 He made the statement as ato i- ; presentation of their matricula
tion on any issue. .. .
.cal extension of a "tolerant" aca- Way to his chosen profession of lion Tic c k a e r ts d.
will be on sale at the
Bitar said Syria • did not ruleidemic freedom, "based on the as-'productive inquiry, to build cum-}same hours to non-students The
out the idea that Hammarskjoldl
•sumption that no one has found ulative data and to "communicate' price of these tickets is $1 . 25 each.
might be called upon by virtuet absolute truth." He said, that "to his discoveries."program will open with
of his office to look into the Sy-!assure academic freedom a uni-i Turning to the "scholar-teach- Mozart's Quartet in G Major, X.
rian-Turkish situation. He charge& varsity must grant the individual! ' '''
er s relationship with a uni- ;387, which will be followed by
that 'the mediation offer of King!
scholar a range of freedom to pur- versity, he said too often we Ravel's Quartet in F Major .
Saud had been exploited and that!
sue : truth and to communicate this! think of a teacher as "a dignified ' After intermission the ensemble
Saud has already relayed to Tur- t v r e r fty without compromising uni_, vaudeville performer running, . will play Beethoven's Quartet in
key the demand of Syria that officials, alumni or the an entertainment agency for E Minor, Opus 59. No. 2.
Turkish troops be removed.
Cabot, public."
- students." The purpose of a The quartet is composed of vio-
U.S. Ambassador He nry
But, he said. "the area of dif- , "scholar-teacher" is essentially , linists Zoltan Szekely and Alex-
Lodge praised the Assembly foil n ..
otify occurs when a scholar's to "propagate his kind and to .andre Moskowsky, violist Denes
acting "soberly and responsibly":
thoughts and commitments lead pass on scholarly methods and Korornzay an d cellist Gabriel
and not voting for an investiga-:
tory commission "which would; himviolation of the law. values."
h to . :
whosu as a Communist professor , He described the picture of a, Magyar.
have dignified an artificial con-: c
goes beyond his philosophy scholar who can't communicate or
Studies Aid Heart Field
and war scare dreamed up'
:by the Soviet Union." and plots the overthrow of the a teacher who is not an able schol-,
government. ar, as nothing but a"myth."; CLEVELAND, Oct. 31 (.4')—A
He said the action is consis- .
tent with the purposes of the "I am unable to answer." he Sorauf also said he believes that New York doctor said today that
seven-power resolution an d said, "how far one should ex- the western university has lost its his studies opened a new field in
gives free rein to the mediation tend the line of academic free- traditional sense of a "family" of the search for prevention of at
efforts of King Saud of Saudi i dom in such cases:' scholars and has become at best a tacks and hardening of the arter
'Arabia. Only - Turkey has ac- , Sorauf charged that universities, "collection of scholars." ies—the nation's No. I killer
-cepted Saud's offer of media- I are headed for self-destruction by.
lion. • !turning out students "ignorant'',
.
Lodge also declared that the de- and "unsympathetic" to the corn
cision not to vote on any resolu-,mitrnent of a scholar. "They think
tion "declares for the first time the only way to learn something
the precedent that Assembly con-Its to take a course in it, but one
sideration of an important matter, can be a student without taking
can be completed without getting!courses of enrolling at a univer
to a resolution." . ; sity."
Sir Leslie Munro, the Astembly, He defined a scholar as an "eter
president, said he was- sure the'nal student" who is committed to,
delegates "will regard the attitude'a system of inquiry on more than
now taken by the parties as a "an 8 to 5 basis.' In addition to
'satisfactory outcome of the de-(inquiring skepticism," he noted
bate."
1 that the scholar has a' responsi-
Campaigns
Will Begin
On Monday
Mobilized political forces will
charge the strident body when
Campus and Lion parties begin
campaigning Monday for the fall
elections of sophomore and fresh
man class officers.
Gary Young, chairman of the
Campus clique,, and William O'-
Neill, Lion clique chairman, said
they expect a 'clean, above board
campaign."
Campus party's steering com
mittee will -meet at 2 p. m. to
morrow in the Hetzel Union
Building to hear committee re
ports.
The All-University Elections
Committee will meet at 6:30 p.m.
tomorrow in 218 HUB to discuss
procedure for the rest of the po
litical season. Elections will be
held Nov. 13 and 14 in the HUB
card room.
Peter Fishburn, Elections Com
mittee chairman, said campaign
ing may begin at 8 a.m. Monday,
and must end at 8 a.m. Nov. 14.
But printed material and po
sters "which are distributed prop
erly-in proper places and are of
a stationary nature" must be re
moved by 5 p.m. Nov. 14.
Total expenses for publicity
purposes may not exceed $l5O a
clique.
Posters will be submitted to the
Elections Committee at 8 a.m.
Nov. 13 for use at the polls. They
may not exceed 3 feet by 4 feet,
and may not include material
other than information about the
candidates.
2 Sophomores Undergo
Appendicitis Operations
Two - :University sophomores
were reported "doing fine" after
appendicitis operations yesterday
afternoon at Centre County Hos
pital, Bellefonte.
_They are Kenneth Jones; mech
anical major from Swissville, and
John Hess, arts and letters ma
jor from Lehman.
Zelko Addresses Group
Harold P. Zelko,- professor of
speech, spoke on "Effective
Speaking" at the national con
vention of the' National Manage
ment Association in Pittsburgh.
Ray Crowned Junior Prom Queen
With a smile on her lips
am:l.a tear in her . eye, Barbara
Ray was crowned Queen of
the Junior Prom last night in
Recreation Hair before a
crowd estimated at 2000.
She was presented With a
jeweled-crown by Woody Herman.
Alvin Clemens. chairman of
The queen contest. presented
Miss Ray with a gold trophy on
behalf of the junior class. She
also received gifts donated by
several downtown merchants.
Miss Ray was sponsored by
Kappa Delta sorority.
Bouquets of 12 red-roses were
iP :
gailig
•.. 01511,:
STATE COLLEGE. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 2. 1957
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
presented to each of the other
four finalists.
The four finalists and their
sponsors included Sylvia Guyer,
Zeta Tau Alpha; Heather Lohr- ,
entz, Kappa Alpha Theta: Sybil:
Kersh, Tau Kappa Epsilon; and•
Virginia Ottinger, Alpha Omicron
Pi.
Miss Ray wore a forest green
and navy blue lull gown of velvet
and net and green satin shoes.
Miss Ray, a Home Economics
major from Huntingdon Valley,
has appeared on several floats
in the Bay Parade in Ocean ;
City, NJ.. during the last three
years..
Woody Herman—his clarinet
and orchestra—provided mu sic i
for about 1000 couples as they i
waltzed over the huge Recreation
Hall floor.
rgiatt
Daily Collegian photos by Marty Seherg
BEST BANNER—Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma display their
banner, which won the sorority division of the banner contest at
last night's pep rally. Other winners were Ni i ttany 24, independent
division, and Kappa Sigma, fraternity division. Even 2-year-old
Peter Hahn, son of a . graduate student, "gets into the act."
Courage and
- Freedom—
See Page 3
FIVE CENTS