elieves Ban IFC On OK's esidence Halls, Day Rushing By BILL JAFFE Editorial on Page Six fraternity members entering men's residence ially lifted yesterday. The ban of halls was par members will be permitted in men's residence in. to 7 p.m. effective today under a joint agree '. Interfraternity Council and residence hall . Fraternit halls from'7 a ment by th ents ed 2 Stu I nvol In Ac idents University students were in volved in two accidents Saturday morning, one ,on near-by Seven Mountains, the other in German- 1 town. outside -Af . Philadelphia. William A. Thompson, senior in business administration frpm Red Lion, escaped serious• injury when his cal— overturned and caught fire on the Seven Moun tains. He wai enroute to Red Lion. Thompson was treated for first degree burns of the face and hands at the Lewistown Hospital dispensary. He was taken to the dispensary after passing motorists removed him from his burning car. It was reported by Lewistown Police that Thompson was released from the dispensary following treat ment. Noel DeCavalcante, senior in busin es s administration from Wynnewood suffered a few minor cuts and bruises, and a woman passenger sustained a slight sprained ankle in the German town accident. Four other pas sengers in the vehicle escaped in jury. DeCavalcante said that the ac cident -happened when he swerved to avoid the car in front of him on the Germantown Pike. He missed the car, but crashed into a light oast, a fire alarm and a traffic light instead. He said the car signaled for a left turn, but then turned right causing him to -turn as he at tempted to pass . on the right. De- Cavalcante's car *as damaged in the front but the cost has not yet been determined, he said. _ Botula By LOU PRATO Sports Editor One would think that head foot ball Coach Rip Engle would be a very happy gent after Penn Skate's .43-0 thrashing , of Penn Saturday., But he's not. It's not that he didn't enjoy seeing his boys bounce back af ter the 14-7 upset by Nebraska last week—far from it. But the overpowering victory cost him and the ' Lions their most valuable piece of grid property—fullback Pat Botula Botula, who led the' Nittany runners in rushing for the sec ' and straight weekend, will be out of action for at least three weeks because,of a painful el 'bow injury suffered early in the second quarter of Satur day's Risco. 1 "I really feel terrible - about Botula's injury," Engle said yes terday afternoon. "He's the best fullback in the East. It's a crime to be eliminated (from action) for several weeks in the manner in which he waS." The manner of Botula's injury was a crime indeed, In -fact, if Penn's three-year veteran tackle Dennis Troychack would have had any manners, Botula would still c i be in the lin up today. - For it was roychack who ap plied the blo k that sent Botula the sidelin s. It came on the 'kickoff folio ing Penn State's second touch own:, Botula 'ran down to, cov the play, but the Whistle blew efore he could help With the ,ta e. But in the split (C9ntintt d on page ten) counselors. During the study hours of 7 p.m. to 7 a.m., no fraternity man will be allowed in the dormitories for any purpose, Ronald Siders, Chairman of the IFC Board of Control, said in announcing the agreement. At last week's IFC meeting, the Board of Control ruled the dormitories off-limits for frat ernity men for any reason oth. arlhan to visit members of the immediate family. Yesterday's ruling partially eliminates the ban. Siders said the ruling will mean fraternity members may enter the dormitories for "any purpose" during the stated hours. In other words, fraternity rush ing on ,an individual basis will be , legal under the, IFC deferred rushing. program. Fra te rnity mothers may also visit upper classmen during the daylight hours and use the residence halls' facilities, Skiers said. Fraternity_ members still may not supply or provide freshmen with anything of monetary value nor may they rush as a 'group. The number composing a "group" has not been defined by the Board of Control, Siders • said. The agreement which partially lifted the ban was made at al meeting"attended by Edward Fry-, moyer, AIM president; Edward, Hintz, IFC president; Crafts, assistant to the dean of 'men in charge of independent af fairs; Dean 0. Edward Pollock; residence hall's counselors; and Skiers. "The residence halls counselors will assume the added responsi bility of policing the dormitories during the night and reporting infractions," Siders said. No exceptions will be made to permit fraternity members to enter the dormitories from 7 p.m. to 9 a.m., Siders said. It will mean the end to campus political campaigning for frat ernity men in the dormitories and counselling by student, grown. Visiting immediate (Continued on page three) Hurt in Lion Victor —Bally Collegian Photo by Bob Thompson I f ittiif SHARD RECEIVES the game - ball from captain Steve Garban and coach Rip Engle after the' 43.0 win over Penn Saturday. Larry was injured in a physical education class last year. The Nittany Lion and Larry's father are in the foreground. Zile Elailg VOL. 59. No. 14 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 30, 1958 FIVE CENTS Court Rules Out South's Evasion WASHINGTON VP) The Supreme Court told resisting Southerners and all others yesterday that "evasive schemes for segregation" cannot nullify orders of the court. The unanimous opinion pointed straight toward just such things as the lease of Little Rock's four high schools for private, segregated operation . Chief Justice Earl Warren read the 17-page opinion wor Little Rock Board Ordered To Maintain Public Schools OMAHA (JP)—Two federal cir- they have advised them not to cuit judges ordered the Little "participate in the operation of Rock Board of Education yester- the Little Rock high schools by day to retain control of the city any private corporation." Ihigh schools and to maintain their The action came while school integrated status. officials and officers of the pri- Judges Harvey M. Johnsen and vate corporation that leased the Joseph N. Woodrough issued an schools yesterday were confer order .restraining - the board, its ring over the next step in the agents and employes , from "tak.: legally-tangled situation ing further action to transfer pos session, control or operation, di rectly or indirectly," of the Little Rock schools, The order forbad. altering the "status quo of, the senior high schools insofar as their Integrated status is concerned." The Little Rock School Board yesterday morning transferred the schools to a private corporation which intends to operate them on a segregated. basis starting 1 today. During the hearing in Omaha yesterday, Justice Department At torney Donald Mac Guineas said the Little Rock school lease had been executed in haste to com plete action before the hearing. LITTLE ROCK, Ark, (?')—At torney for the teachers in Little Rock high schools said last night 200 Army-State Tickets To Go on Sale Today Two hundred more tickets for the Penn State-Army game will go on sale at 8 a.m. today at the Recreation Hall ticket office. Tickets for the Homecoming game - with Marquette, Oct. 11, will be on sale starting at 8 a.m. tomorrow also at the ticket office. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE LITTLE ROCK School board leased four high schoosl for use as private segregated schools shortly before ' Supreme Court declared evasive scheme's cannot be countenanced. Private corpo ration planned to reopen schools today "unless we get some sort of direct order to to proceed," NORFOLK. Va.—First whole sale school closings under Vir ginia program to resist inte gration loaves 10,000 high school pupils idle. School board calls emergency meeting to discuss next moves. WASHINGTON Secretary of the Army Wilber Brucker says he knows - nothing of the possibility of using troops again this year in Little Rock school crisis. Applications Deadline Set For Homecoming Queen The deadline for Homecoming Queen applications is 5 p.m. to morrow. Candidates must turn in to the Hetzel Union desk a picture of themselves, a cd4•d _ with their name, school address, phone ex tension and the name of their sponsor if they have one. Toiltgiatt d for word in a quiet proceed ing, while in Little Rock the lease plan blessed by Gov. Orval E. Faubus was being put into being. Warren didn't name Faubus or any other state official, and he didn't define what was meant by evasive tactics. But the opinion did assert: "The constitutional rights of children not to be discriminated against in school admission on grounds of race or color . . . can neither be nullified openly and directly by state legislators or state executive or judicial officers, nor nullified indirect ly by them through evasive schemes for segregation wheth er attenmpted ingeniously or in genuously . . . states can not support segregated schools through any arrangement, man agement, funds, or property cannot be equated with the 14th amendment's command that no state shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Arkansas is one of several Southern states which are trying by one means or another to keep Negro and white pupils separate, regardless of whb.t the Supreme Court says. On the surface, yesterday's opinion ruled out every form of resistance—direct and indirect— but no one believed that Gov. Faubus and others of like mind had any intention of giving up. The opinion was unanimous, as have been all of those since the court first ruled in 1954 that forced segregation is un constitutional. The opinion stressed the thesis that the 1954 opinion "is the supreme law of the land." Yesterday's special session was attended by all the nine members except Justice William 0. Doug las. Yesterday's session was called to deliver an opinion supporting the court's Sept. 12 decision call ing for integration to proceed immediately at Little Rock's Cen tral High School. It has not pro ceeded, however, because of re sistance by state authorities. There was some expectation in advance that the court would say in some detail what it meant three years ago when it said pub lic school segregation on account of race would have to be ended "with all deliberate speed." Warmer Weather, Rain Seen Today The Nittany Li on, whose ghost writer is the weatherman, scribbled a pro mise of a little warmer weather t o day, followed, however, by in creasing cloudi ness in the late aft el noon and rain tonight. Penn Film to•Be Shown Movies of the Penn-Penn State game will be shown by the Var sity "S" Club at 6:45 tonight In 119 Osmond. Matriculation cards are neces sary for admission. do.„--,,----7, __ , te ,,,,,,,,,, 1 Lj204146 1 1 "I lost roc II now 1 can't even see my awn ad in COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS" but 13,000 people WILLI