Mlr VOL. 58. No. 44 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 12. 1957 Clinch Lions By Defeating Two of the nations' longest football streaks were extended Saturday afternoon_at County Stadium, Milwaukee, Wis., when Penn State downed Marquette, 20-7, before a tiny crowd of 4719. For the Lions of Coach Rip Engle, the win clinched their 19th consecutive winning season—the longest of its kind among major collegiate football powers. The Lions are now 5-2 on the season with only Holy Cross and Pittsburgh remaining on the regular 1957 schedule. Such was not the case for the Hilltoppers of Coach 'Johnny Druze, however. The contest was the Hill toppers' 18th straight loss, dating back to the final game of their 1955 sched ule. This is the longest football losing streak among major col legiate teams since World War IL The score, however, was not completely indicative of the con test.. Marquette was a fired-up ball club which simply did not have the horses to match the tal ents of the _Lions. Still, the Hill toppers played what Druze later called their best game of the year. Statistics bear this out rather readily. First downs were even at 17 apiece; the Hilltoppers had a two-yard margin in total net yardage, 310-308. Marquette gain ed 196 .on 'the ground and 114 in the air compared to 184 on the ground and 124 in the air for the Lions. Only in the final score— and that definitely is the deciding factor—did the Hilltoppers fail to match the Lions. Despite the Lions' lethargic performance in spots, Marquette was never really within hailing distance of tying the score. The Lions scored the first time they gained control of the ball after the first half kickoff. Starting on the Marquette 38 after an out-of-bounds Hilitopper punt, quarterback Ilichie Lucas gilded the Nittanies to a score in 12' plays with halfback Dave Kasperian going the final three yards off right tackle at 4:36 of (Continued on page six) 1000 Pitt Tickets To Go on Sale About 1000 tickets for the University of Pittsburgh-Penn State football game to be played Nov. 23 in Pittsburgh will go on sale at 8:15 a.m. tomorrow in the ticket office, Recreation Hall. Edward M. Czekaj, ticket manager, said the tickets will include $4 sideline seals and $2.50 seats in the end zone. The office will be open from 8:15 a.m. to noon and from 1:00 to 4:30 p.m. weekdays. —Daily Collegian Photo by Ken Florence 'SILVER TONGUED ORATORS'—Members of the Men's Debate Team, (from left) Robert W. Adams, David R. Scott, Jay Feldstein and Gerald Bogus, display trophies and plaque they won at the International Tournament over the weekend at the University of Rochester. Elatig FOR A BETTER PENN STATE By VINCE CAROCCI Sports Editor Men Debaters Win International Tourney The men's debate team won first place in the Internal tional Tournament at the University of Rochester last week end. - The team record was eight wins and two losses. Twenty-four colleges and universities from the United States and Canada took part in the Tournament Robert W. Adams, senior in business administration fr o m Johnstown, won second place in the outstanding speaker contest. Gerald Bogus, junior in arts and letters from Brownsville, placed fourth in the contest. The team was given a large ro tating trophy which they will keep for a year, and a smaller permanent trophy. Each member of the team Nvas awarded a plaque and a special plaque was given to Adams. The affirmative team defeat ed teams from Fordham Uni versity. Williams College, Uni versify of Buffalo and Roches ter Institute of Technology. It lost to St. John's College of Jamaica. N.Y. Members of the affirmative ; t' am were Jay Feldstein, junior, in arts and letters from Elizabeth,; and David R. Scott, senior in agri-; cultural economics-rural sociology, from Harrisburg. The negative team defeated St. John's College, Rochester, N.Y.,' Dartmouth College, Middlebury College and Duquesne University.l Ifr lost to Fordhatri University. , Members of the negative team were Bogus and Adams. David Jabusch, assistant debate ; coach and graduate student in speech from State College, accom panied the team. The tournament was the first this semester for the team. It was also the firs t . time the men's debate team took part in the International Tournament. Adams, team manager, said the' (Continued on page five) tiL., dr 40 i :I'k .. / t ' eallrgt att ILP - WeekPrObatiOn /ass' I n ' '9VE CENTS Requested for lißli Winning Season By Control Board Marquette 20-7 i The Interfiaternity Council Board of Control has rec ommended a 16-week social probation period for Zeta Beta Tau for having women guests in the house_Saturday night when the house was not approved by the office of the dean of men. Alan Rubens, president of the fraternity and a member of the Board of Control, was askedi to resign from the board fer "con-:/S pace i duct unbecoming a member," of-! Man ter the board decided he was "di-; rectly responsible" for the unap-! e - proved party. .Pi a n Seen Rubens yesterday said he will appeal the decision of the board on the probation to the Senate Subcommittee on Student Al- By Hagen Af fairs. I The decision must be approved; WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 itP)-- by the subcommittee before it; Dr. John P. Hagen, head of Pro goes into effect. The board recommended the' ject Vanguard, said today the house put on probation for the re- ;United States should develop a mainder of this semester and the, well coordinated program aimed first eight weeks of next semester,! at sending man into space. to be effective immediately. i 1 The Vanguard project, devoted There was a woman present tO serve as housemother Saturday, ru , o l aunc hing ~ ng a fully instrumented but she already had been disap- earth satellite, is a step in that proved by the office of the dean direction, Eagen told a news con of men to serve as chaperone, ! Terence. 'George Wills, chairman of the i Board of Control, said. 1 .• He estimated it would be , 'years" before a man could be The fraternity, according to !sent up with any chance of get- Wills, attempted to register a king back to earth safely. temporary housemother on Fri- 1 Laika, the Russian .dog inside day. ! Sputnik 11, appeared to d a y to er. But since it was past the dead- ;have died in the interests of fur- He is recovering from the of-1 line for registering chaperones. ' thering space travel. There was fects of attempt-I the dean of men's office refused 'no official report on the fate of ing to insulate', the request to approve the house !the animal but there was general himself from the! for women guests. During the agreement in Moscow that it was "coldest night of! cot.rse of the evening, a num- .dead. the year" las t! ber of women were brought in- ! night with three! to the house, Wills said. .However, at a Swedish embassy reception in Moscow. Premier q a Nikuarts of anti-! Rubens, Wills said, brought ' - olai Bulganin said today that freeze. date to the house although he when last heard from Yesterday The Lion's anti-' kn that thehousewasnot , e.v freeze antics, proved. !reporters, Bulganin ..said yestee we r e prompted! W'lls ' i i said Rubens had day's"checkedl telemetric transmission from —in a niMent. with as many people as possible"! i {her llincluded reports on of wild abandon to get an affirmative answer on pulse, heartbeat and blood —by State Col-1 the question of the pe issibilitv iher lege High School's 20-14 victory! of women in the house. "Aopar- t pressure. over the Red Raiders of Bellefonte; of no attempt was made tot Hagen said he personally would in yesterday's Old Iron Kettle grid keep p the women out of the house,"lprefer to send up a rat rather rivalry. :he said. !than a dog because, he said, a like a human, physio ! The Lion is not likely to greet: While on social probation, a rat is more today's fair, 38-42-degree-high: fraternity is not permitted to ilogicall3. A monkey is even more i weather. entertain women guests at any {like a human, he added. . time. ! Vanguard's chief said one of the AF Officer to cle is that of re-entry into the Speak Wills called the "unapproved !problems of a manned space vehi party" a flagrant violation of Uni- , The meteorology seminar will. versity and IFC regulations." ;earth's denser atmosphere, where hear Lt. Col. Harold Powell, U.S.; Rubens said he will appeal th e lfriction will cause intense heat. Air Force, speak on "Forecasts board's decision. "We feel that I The best way to get a man back Verification and Weather in Air we were treated unfairly and that 1 into the heavier atmosphere, Ha craft Accidents" at 4:10 p.m. to-, the penalty was far too severe : gen went on, would be to put day in 202 Willard. - !under the circumstances." he said. , wings on the vehicle. Lion Floored By Anti -Freeze The Nittany Lion has not yet awakened to view today's weath- Lion Claims 'Sensible' Planks; Campus Defends ROTC Stand Nails and splinters flew last night as Lion and Campus clique chairmen ripped at each other's platform planks. - At a press conference in the Daily Collegian office, both chairmen proved their joint opinion, "The two political parties stand for different things," as they picked apart each other's platforms. William O'Neill, Lion clique chairman, said his party's. platform is "much more sen sible" than that of Campus party. 'Recommendations in the Lion, In restating Lion's plank on an • platform, he said, are within the;AM station, O'Neill said: "Abolish C l iquesl to Talk realm of student government. tWT.:!F . 'M or proVide it with AM " Gary Young, Campus clique facilities. i He said he knows little of the :chairman, lashed out at Lion's; He aspects of an AM station, On Campaigns ;plank on extending freshman wo-financial he gave the student press The All-University EI ec tions ;men's hours. He said Lion party , 'fund and the senior class gift _as Committee will meet at 7 tonight ;twice before has proposed this , two - possible methodi of obtaining in 216 Hetzel 'Union with the ,in the campaigns of March two possib le clique chairmen to answer ques- Land October 1956. He asked o'-t atinas. tions, clarify the Elections Code, The All-University Elections .Neill, "What happened to those,' Committee was criticized by ant. hear complaints of code vio iproposals?" ' both clique chairmen. lations. "I wasn't here then, Gary," 0-• O'Neill said the committee is ' Chairman Peter Fishburn yes x Neill replied. I "responsible for student apathy .terday said, "I would definitely 1 O'Neill laughed at Campus ; ir. some degree." He said the say the campaigns have been run party's proposal to make ROTC : committee's scope is too broad- cleanly so far." Party campaign courses elective for men stu- ' O'Neill said that students are literature distributed yesterday dents. intelligent enough to separate le-;included criticism of the oppcksi ! He called this "unrealistic" igitimate platforms from impos-:tion's platform planks. ! ' and said it is not within the 'sible ones, and that no arbitrary; Today marks the end of verbal realm of student government. ;decisions by the Elections Com-:campaigning and candidates' per ! Young called his plank on RO—raittee are necessary. 'sonal appearances. Printed cam- ITC "really progressive and con- But Young said, "We need a paign material must be removed istructive." . . .._ _ _ .. (Continued. on page fire) iby 5 p.m. Thursday. ~ . ~ _
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