Today's orecast: First i Elig Snowfall VOL. 58. No. 5 ast Pot Mid With Events Boils New eanon, Nov. 22 (A') ww incidents from ard through Jeru -3 set the Middle 'fling again today. rity forces refused embers of the Sy t to cross the hor ny republic on the shoreline. The Sy t was reported in- BEIRUT, Le' —A Series of Lebanon south; salem to Cai East pot to la; Lebanese sec to permit 17 n rian Parliame der into this t Mediterranean rian governme censed. .sun:, s and pit. t. performances ,a out the window this afternoon e. hen Penn State and Pitt tangle a tneir traditional gridiron rivalry at Pitt Stadium iii Pittsburgh. The Panthers are a one-touchdown favorite. If ou don't believe that pre % iou, records mean little in a Penn State-Pitt game. maybe this fact will help you to understand the ,ertoucness of the rivalry: In the last 17 games, the fayorite has won only six games, Kickoff time is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. According to latest re ports from Pitt, there are still plenty of end zone tickets avail able. A crowd of some 50,000 peo ple is expected-8000 short of the sellout mark. For the Lions, the game will be the determining factor in a pos =Daily Collegiarir Inlet° b. Don Von Wolf fradt sible Gator Bowl Bid. A win OFF TO POUNCE ON PITT are these coeds, who left yesterday for the Lion-Panther grid classic. would keep the Lions in conten tion. also would almost certainly eliminate them. But, bowl bids are an item of Anonymous Call to Grandfather the future—Pitt is the present worry. Coach Rip Engle said he was not giving serious consider ation to the possibilities of a trip Claims Rhoad Joined Service south in Da ember of the until he Pitt 'ga was pt. However, at Thursday night's A mysterious unidentified telephone call received Thursday night by the grandfather pep rally Engle hinted Lions still have a chance that the nce for the of Thomas Rhoad, freshman from Allentown who has been missing since Nov. 12, said the bid• when, introducing the Lions eniors, he said: "This is one of youth was dissatisfied at home and has enlisted in the service. the saddest occasions in a coach's The call was received by Benjamin Rhoad Sr., who said he tried to find out who the career when he has to introduce his seniors who will only be play caller was but the person would say only, "This is a boy from college." ing one more—or possibly two Rhoad told a Collegian reporter mare—games for him." last night the caller said: "The elk • For the Lions, the game marks Directory Includes ;only report I can give is that he outing Club Plans the close of 13 seniors' careers: i was dissatisfied at home and has— . • ends Jack Faris, Les Wafters, Paul Graduate Awards i left for the service." Party at Ski Cabin 'North, Romeo Panozzo and Ron , The student's grandfa th er said • Markiewicz; guards Captain Joe The first annual World-Wide he asked several times who was The Outing Club's Cabin and Sabo!, Richie McMillen and Skip- Graduate Award Directory has' calling and in which service the Trail and Ski divisions will hold py Stellfox; centers Bob Rice and ben published for teachers, ad-' younger Rhoad had enlisted: an overnight cabin party today Charlie Ruslavage; halfback ;minis trators, scientists and social The caller, however, repeated and tomorrow at the ski cabin. Bucky Paolone; an d fullbacks , scientists who want to subsidize, that he could say no more. 'Babe Caprara and Ben Williams. their master er doctorate degrees, Mrs. Benjamin Rhoad Jr.. moth- Transportation wil 1 be avail- Only 12 of these seniors will :or do post-doctorate or indepefi- er of the missing student, said able at 2 p.m. behind Osmond (Continued on page six) dent research. draft boards in the Allentown. Laboratory for persons who wish The directory includes informa- 'Philadelphia and Harrisburg areas to go early for hiking. PRR to Sell Tickets at HUB I lion about the fields of study,'have been checked with no trace. Additional transportation will The Pennsylvania Railroad Co. duration of the awards, amount- Mrs. Rhoad said the Allentown.be available at Bm. Members will operate a ticket office at the of the stipends, number and 'board, whose offices are several should bring sleeping equipment. Hetzel Union desk from 9am. to where available, the specific con-.doers from their home, explained ,Meals will be provided. 5 p.m. or. 'Monday. . ;ditions and when and whom to that in order for anyone to enlist. !apply. 'a birth certificate is needed. If there is no certificate, the par ents are notified for their permis- T ra ffi c Jam solution ,sion for the person to enlist. Mrs. Rhoad said an agent for the Federal Bureau of Investiga tion and William DeWalt, Allen- R f Mown Police Department detec- e use 1 Wiegand tive, are working on the case in addition to state and city police. All-University Cabinet's request for streamlinine Grange Mrs. Rhoad said: "I can't s understand how anyone could parking lot has been turned down, at least for the present. (Continued on page tiro) Robert Steele. All-University president, told Cabinet members Thursday that funds are not now available to con- Lion Predicts struct an exit to Pollock Road from the parking lot. • , He read a letter'from Walter H. Ist Big Snow - Wiegand, director of the Depart- Road to College Avenue from The Nittany Lion had trouble ment of Physical Plant, who d sai 10:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Friday and getting himself and his four suits the request would be considered Saturday . of road south behind of long-johns through the door of again if funds become available. Simmons_ v and McElwain Halls arid the bus last night as .he departed' The request was part of a simp- one-way road east behind the ne..v for tlr'e den of the Powderpuff lined parking plan submitted to women's halls. Panthers, and approved by Cabinet this •Ban on parking on north side Hi s large 'semester. The parking plan was of College Avenue in front of the snow shovel formulated by the Student En- new women's halls. _ w , as stowed , campment Workshop on Regula- • Campus patrolmen at the cor away in th e Itions, Controls and Student Wel- ner of Pollock and Shortlidge bagage compari- fare. Roads and at the corner of Short ment in prepar- I The exit onto Pollock Road was lidge Road and the road behind ation for the felt by Cabinet members to be the new women's halls from 10:30 predicted first ! the only effective way to alleviate p.m. to 1 p.m. on Fridays and big snow of the ;Friday and Saturday bottle-necks Saturdays. :season due late ;on Shortlidge Road. - - •Strict enforcement of campus tonight. I The rest of the plan includes traffic and parking rules. —Daily Collegian Photo by Don Von Wolff radt ' The Lion pre , i requests ior: •A committee to evaluate con- AS THE MONTH BEFORE CHRISTMAS and all through the 1 diets that falling 1 sA Borough policeman at Pugh ditions and expenses of existing town, the decorations were up already—at least on the campus :t empe r a t ures , Street and College Avenue be- parking lots furnished by fratern side of College Avenue. The 25-foot tree was donated by H. E. 'and precipitation go together tO tween 11:45 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.lties an rooming houses. odgkiss, transported by Shoemaker Bros., Inc., and erected yester- 'form snow—usually. Today, how- . Monday through Friday. None of these other requests ' ever, sho u I d be increas•ngly, •Ban on parking and stopping have been acted on by the agen .•• at the foot' of the Mall with West Penn Power Co. winches. cloudy with a high of 40-44. ion. Shortlidge Road front Pollock:cies involved. ihorities refused to liner land in Cairo Isengers, including ordan delegation Egyptian au let a Jordan ai with its 20 pa a seven-man • ucational confer- to -an Arab an airline spokes- Amman. explanation was -r action. ence, a _Jordan' man chareed No official given for alibi At the' same time a blockade in Old Jerusa em and new out breaks of gunf re sharpened Jor dan-Israeli en ity. High-ranking Israeli ,officials said they believed Jordan's King Hussein, whose enemies in Soviet aided Syria and Egypt have been calling for his assassination, had started a new campaign to dis prove charges that he is sof t toward Israel. These incidents occurred as an interview with Soviet party boss Nikita Khrushchev was published in Cairo reviving charges that the United States had tried to inveigle Jordan and Iraq, and then Turkey into an attack on Syria. - Lebanon's slap at the Syrian Parliamentary delegation was the first hint that an open break be tween Damascus and Beirut might be imminent. The' Lebanese goveinment has been trying to avoid stepping on any Syria n toes. But for two weeks now its security forces have been cracking down in an effort to stamp out arms smugg ling and a wave of bombings, stabbings, beatings and killings. Chem Phys Dean Receives $8330 U.S. Health Grant A United States Public Health Service grant of $8330 has been received by . Dr. Clarence I. Noll, associate dean of the College of Chemistry E.nd Physics. The grant 'viii support Noll's studies on a synthetic chemical compound, 1-amino-cyclopentane 1-carboxylic acid, and related compounds for a 1-year period. o . llr BMW() TM STATE COLLEGE. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 23. 1957 Lions, Pitt Clash FOR A BETTER PENN STATE rgiatt Half-Holiday in '62? See Pare 4 FIVE CENTS Today Panthers Are Six-Point Favorites By VINCE CAROCCI Sports Editor
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