Today's F recast: Conner Warm, ed unity VOL. 58. No. 14' IKl:ames Open House Frate nities ternities have o l sponsor "open during Orienta -1 new upperclass 1 , en transfer stu :l re Haller, pro le an, announced Twelve fra been chosen t I house" socials l tion Week fo men and wo dents, Theod grain chair last night. The Interfrat • rnity Council also approved the proposed plan to finance the IFI -Panhellenic Ball, accepted a $9691 budget and made 10 appointmen s to the Board of Control and In committee. The 12 ffaternities named were CM Phi. Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Nu, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Delta CM, Alpha Gamma Rho, Sigma Pi, Phi Kappa Psi, Alpha Tau Omega, Theta Kappa Phi, Phi Mu Delta and Theta Delta CM. Some 660 students-400 men and 200 women—are expected to attend the open houses to be held Wednesday evening, Sept. 10. The program will replace the `Starlight" Ball, which was spon sored by the IFC and Panhellenic Council. The IFC members accepted the recommendation of James Hammerle, IFC ball chairman, to finance the sale of the tick ets for the March 13 ball. The ticket sales 'will be pro-rated on a percentage basis for the brothers and pledges living in the unit at the lime of the dance. • Hammerle said the tickets will be placed on sale to non-fraternity men 10 days before the dance and only a number of tickets neces sary to offset the expected loss would be printed. Fifty tickets will be placed on sale the day of the dance and - also will be available the night of the dance. Richard Christian, secretary treasurer, presented the proposed budget based on expected income and expenses. Some $4300 is al located for the IFC-Panhellenic Ball, $lOOO for a rushing program, (Continued on page eight) Walker Sits In On Talks At Capital President Eric A. Walker is sitting in with the nation's top educators, scientists and econo mists today .in a Washington, D.C., conference on research and development and their impact on the economy. , , James R. Killian, President Eisenhower's special assistant for science and technology, will be the main speaker of the confer ence in the Shoreham_ Hotel. i t The confer nee is aimed to bring togethe the top manage ment, researcl and econoniic ex perts from t re areas—industry, higher education . and govern ment. . After returning from Washing ton, Walkerwill be guest speaker tomorrow night at a Williamsport meeting of Lycoming County al umni. The Varsity Quartet of the Men's Glee Club will sing at the meeting. • Walker will be 'introduced by Eugene Gramley of Milton who is national alumni president. Dr. Phillip Raece, Lycoming County alumni president, will have charge of the meeting. Walker is scheduled Friday to visit the University experimental farms near Ligonier. The president will attend an other .meeting of alumni Satur day at' the Ogontz Center. Tilt Baitg-A-0') o.:l3l.trvi ._,..„; Editorial AM Station Would Be .vc n Best Senior Gift Choice With a $lO,OOO stake in the University's future, the Class of '5B is preparing to elect a worthy project to SI receive its senior class gift. Seniors will vote for their choices next week when they pick up their copies of the 1 1958 LaVie. The class gift suggestions are: • Money for the Stone Valley recreation project. e An east campus entranceway. e A circulating art collection B Books and photostat machines for the Pattee Library. • AM radio facilities for WDFM Each senior has about a $4 investment in the gift ?) fund, accumulated over a 4-year period through fees. Although all of the suggestions have some merit, if; we belieye providing AM facilities for WDFM is easily the gift selection which would do the most good fOr the greatest number of students and which would best ',iv serve as a permanent memorial to the Class of '5B. We believe an analysis of the gift suggestions will 'I . show this to be true: The Stone Valley recreation project, located on ;, DON'T PUSH, you'll get your turn—ROTC students hurried to wait to turn in- their uniforms yesterday. Michael Herbst, freshman in business administration from Ford City, and Paul Wardoclip, freshman in counseling from Arnold, appear to be thinking of all the Thursday afternoons they will have free now. 140 Seniors Sign Alumni Register A total of 140 June' graduates have pledged to join the Penn State Alumni Association. "The seniors should be compli mented .for taking such an inter est in Penn State," Ross B. Leh man, assistant executive secretary of the Alumni Association, said. Re terms the 140 "an excep; tionally high number" for so early in the pledge period. The enrollment campaign, in augurated this year, is credited with the number_ of early pledges. The Alumni Office expects that the drive, which will extend through commencement day, will enroll at least 500-600 of the grad uating class. Since 1950, the first year alumni memberships were offered at special rates to grad uates, approximately one-third FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1958 (Continued on page four) _ of each class has joined the associ ation. Conducting the ,enrollment campaign are 134 senior class agents, appointed by the indi vidual college campaign man agers. Thomas Hollander, presi dent of the class of 1958, ap pointed the college chairman. Each agent is to contact 10 graduates in his living area. The Alumni Association is of fering life memberships for $7O, $5 less than the usual rate. This maybe paid in full, or with a down payment- of $lO, to be fol lowed by four annual installments of • $l5. One-rear memberships ar e being offered for $2. Fees for the ensuing four years would be $3 annually. Five year's after graduation, the annual rate be- De Gaulle Scorns Role of Dictator PARIS (W)—Gen. Charles De Gaulle declared yesterday he is again at the disposal of France to bring order out of chaos. He renounced any role of dictator but said he would re quire extraordinary powers if he-tools _the helm of govern- The towering gaunt World War, II hero spoke out at a crowded Paris news conference. Then hey returned to his village home to; await his country's decision. His statement brought a slight! easing of tension in France. Some) thought 'it appeared De Gaulle might come to power through constitutional means in the crisis arising from the Algerian rebel: lion. Allied officials in London suggestbd he had lowered his price to boost his prospects for assuming leadership. Standing ramrod straight and speaking in a clear, firm voice,, De Gaulle said he is ready to serve "if the people wish, as in the preceding great national cri sis, at the head of the govern ment of the French republic." "I am a man alone," De Gaulle' asserted, "because I am tied to no party nor to any organization. I am a man who belongs to no one and who belongs to every one." ! - • Shrugging aside a question on 'they plead guilty to the charge, otherwise they will have to go public liberties, the general asked: before the grand jury in August. "Have I ever attacked fimdarnen-, The charge against Burns re tal public liberties? No, I nistored suited from an accident January them when they had disappeared.:lo when Burns was driver of the How would you have me, at 67, • start a career as dictator?" car in which his fraternity bro -1 ther, Jack Welsh, at that time De Gaulle said France is a ,a junior in forestry from New weakened country struggling in ,CaMe was killed. a world of groat difficulties and The , Commonwealth produced dangers. Charles Jencks, state policeman "But there are good cards in who investigated the accident; France's hand for the future," he Boyd Musser, one of the first per " These cards open the per- sons to arrive on the scene; Dr. spective for a tomorrow which Estes Cullen, deputy coroner; will really be a French renais- Donald Dunlap, another witness sance." 'to the accident, and Rodney Hey, De Gaulle was asked a general engineer in charge of construe question on what he-would do in - tion in the vicinity of the acci- Algeria—in the Nationalist rebel- dent as witne2ses. lion situation now complicated Burns is represented by Judge by the French military-colonialist William Litke and William Ray rebellion against Preniier Pierre croft. Pflimlin's Paris government "I envisage the case where the i-lion today because of the pri- French people might ask me to mary elections and the defense act as an arbitrator," he replied.swill present its case tomorrow. -- - He declared Algeria must be kept from separating fro in iSunny Weather France—"something which Al- 1 geria does not want, nor France either." I Foreseen Today "As for the role of the army,"; De Gaulle said, "it is normally' The Nittany Lion is spending the instrument of the state, and• most of his free time 'at Whipples thus it should remain. But first l these days and yesterday was no there must be a state." I exception. De Gaulle demonstrated he re- "The rain doesn't keep me tains the oratorical vigor he show- away from the e . u , - ed during the war. ;beach. I'm get- a• .r He walked firmly to the ros-Ting all .the re- '''' trum as erect as he is pictured in laxation I can cartoons, and spoke in a clear,, before finals be-. ...... —,------.. firm voice which could have been gin," he c 0 m- —. heard without microphones, comes $4; after ten years,ss, An Alumni Office spokesman said that one of the advantages in becoming a member of the association was that member ship expedited admission of children. With the regular white associa tion pledge slips, pink Alumni Foreign Uncertainties Fund slips are being distributed by the campaign agents. Signees Cause Stocks to Drop promise to give "at least a dollar' NEW YORK {EP)—Foreign un each year" to the University' certainties yesterday helped bring through the Alumni Fund. !about the slowest and narrowest Applications for the Alumni :stock market since March. Association and Alumni Fund ! Prices were irregular but the pledges will be available at the closing statistics showed a slight Alumni Association Office, 104 : trend to the downside. Most Old Main, through commence- 'changes were narrow. ment. I Volume dropped to 1,910,000 Senior campaign agents have:shares compared with 2,030,000 been asked to return pledge cards Friday and was the smallest since to the Alumni Office before the' 1,810,000 shares were traded I end of the week. (March 3. Undefeated Golf Team See Page 6 'Not Guilty' Plea Given By Burns The Commonwealth res e. its ease yesterday in the trial of James Burns, a former ser..;or in hotel administration from Altoo na, who pleaded not guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaugh ter. Two sophomores, James H. Al len Jr., sophomore in chemical engineering from ,Merion, and James Greeves, sophomore in metallurgy from Merion, may al so be tried this week in Center County Court on a charge of mal icious mischief in the operation of a steam shovel May 4. Richard Sharp, district attorney, said the two would be brought to trial if 1 The court will not be in ses- mented. He add- " ed that he takes o „ his textbooksh 4c . y along but he ek tt doesn't get very , m - u c h accom- Wished." Today's pr e- "`"`~--- dieted sunny and mild weather with temperatures ranging from 65-75 degrees won't help him get his studying done, but he had better take a hint and "get sta.rt ed." Studying, that is. FIVE CENTS