Today's For Sunny, Cool cast: VOL. 59. No. 44 —Collegian Photo- by nob Thompson ONE OF THE CROWD ... President Eric A. Walker, center, holds his breath during a Penn State fumble Saturday in Morgantown. Fumbles Gridders • By LOU PRATO Sports Editor If one comment could explain Penn State's 14-14 tie with rival West Virginia Saturday afternoon in Morgantown, it would probably be the one made by Lion guard Chuck Rus- lavage in the locker room fol "Our coaches always e Sunny Weather Predicted by Lion tinue sunny and cold with a predicted high of '51.. The low tonight will be 37; the high to morrow, 48. . Tonight and tomorrow will be cloudy and cool with occa sional rain. Thursday the wea ther will clear and it will be colder with variable winds. English Graduate - Exams To Be Given Nov. 22 English graduate examinations for the doctor of philosophy can didacy will be given from 9 a.m. to noon Nov. 22 in 205 Sparks. Anyone interested in taking the examination' should register in 247 Sparks as soon as possible. Candidates Begin Campaign For Frosh, Sophomore Offices University party candidates yesterday cam paigned in Atherton, Nittany and Irvin halls and visited four or five fraternities last night. According to clique chairman Howard Byers, one party plank, rather than advocate student government reorganization, will support the Cab inet committee on reorganization. Byers said he would like to see freshman and Independents use present facilities, such as Waring Hall, for recreation. Byers said the faculty and administration supports the plank on offering free legal advice to students. Advice may be given enther by faculty members or State College lawyers, he said. The growing student body will necessitate (Continued on page seven) 4ar .13 t i t igfr i,.-N.:A.,-- (f, il ti 11, STATE COLLEGE, PA.. TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 11. 1958 Hold to Tie I owing the game. phasize that fumbles and penalties will hurt us," the tower-I ing defensive stalwart said, "and they sure did today!" That they did especially the' fumbles. In fact, the Lions handled the pigskin like a hot potato, fum bling seven times and recover ing only one. Five of the bob bles occurred in West Virginia territory including two inside the Mountaineer's five yard line. The fumbling• was contagious, too, for none of the starting backs could escape the misery. Half backs Dave Kasperian and Fran Paolone fumbled twice apiece and quarterback Rich Lucas and' Pat Botula bobbled once each. Only Botula's fumble was re covered by .the Lions and that was by Botula himself. Alter- I nate unit halfback Jim . Kerr I was the victim of the other fumble one which ultimately led to the tying touchdown by the Mounties. The two fumbles by Kasperian, one by Paolone and Lucas' lone bobble halted potential Lion scor ing drives. Kasperian's first mis cue on the , M6untie..one-yard line after a 13-yard run stopped a 38- yard drive the first time the Nit tanies had the ball. His next muff came in the "third quarter the (Continued on page nine) Campus party candidates for sophomore class offices began campaigning yesterday by visiting three fraternities at noon and' four at dinner. Freshman class candidates will Campaign in both the men's and women's reside-ice halls since they are not allowed in fraternities dtie to the deferred rushing rule. '^ I James Elliott, clique chairman for Campus party, outlined his party's plans for carrying out its platforms in an interview last night. Elliott said that as far as carrying out plans for a general seating , arrangement in place of class sections in the enlarged football stadium to be completed next year, "every student will have a good seat" and he would like to eliminate the (continued on page seven) FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Reds Want to Shove West Out. of Berlin MOSCOW (M—Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev yesterday demanded an end to four-power occupation of Berlin. He hinted the Soviet Union is ready to free itself of treaty obligations to the West on freedom 'of transport between isolated West Berlin and West Germany. The Soviet leader told a Polish-Soviet friendship meeting at Lenin Stadium "the Police Pool Efforts Against Crime Wave Local, state and federal police are pooling their efforts to move in on an apparent crime wave in State College. Nine completed and attempted burglaries in the borough since Thursday, including an attempt on the People's Na tional Bank, have prompted the drive by State College police, Rockview State Police and A. F. Helleberg, local agent of the Fed eral Bureau of Investigation. Helleberg was called into the investigation wave when it was discovered that the bank was robbed Friday night. Victims of the burglaries were The Music Room, Mets gers, Hartman Electric, Bill McMullen's Floral Shop and Alvo Electronics. Also it is be lieved that burglaries were at tempted at Bill's Barber Shop, Gus's Restaurant and Christy's Restaurant. "No concrete clues" have been found, according to police. Investi gation was continued yesterday by the three law enforcement agencies. This week's robbery spree came two weeks after a series of bur glaries at fraternity houses over the first big weekend, of the fall semester. Items missing ranged from jewelry to coats and money. Total value of the items ranged from $24 to $350. Loot in this series of robberies has been limited to mostly mer chandise. Although no complete tabulation of the loot has been compiled, the police report that the list will be well up into hunreds of dollars. The main means of entry was by breaking window glasses in doors, by taking the doors off the hinges or by breaking the bolts from them. The investigative agencies list ed a "definite possibility" of a connection between all of the re cent burglaries. Pittsburgh Grid Tickets Go on Sale Tomorrow Tickets for the Pitt-Penn State football game will go on sale at 8 a.m. tomorrow at the ticket booth in front of Beaver Field. Ticket sales will be limited to six a customer. All tickets are $4. Many good seats are still avail able for the Holy Cross football game, according to Business Man ager Edward Czekaj. Holy Cross tickets may be obtained at the ticket office in Recreation Hall. egiatt Students, Profs Escape Injury In 5 Accidents Four University students and two professors escaped injury in five different traffic accidents over the weekend. A car driven by Robert Model, junior in business administration from Malvern, N.Y., was involved in a collision with a car driven by J. J. Eberhart of Bellefonte at 1:05 a.m. Saturday. The mis hap occurred on_ Pollock road near Schwab Auditorium. Dam age to both cars was estimated, at under $lOO. At 4:30 p.m. Saturday a car driven by Ben Lucow, instructor of English, was involved in a col lision with a car operated by James Neidigh of State College. The accident happened at the intersection of South Burrowes Street and Beaver Avenue. Dam age to both. cars was estimated at $7O. An estimated damage of $6OO was done to a car 6perated by Richard Bierly, junior in aero nautical engineering from Belle fonte, when it was involved in a collision with a car driven by (Continued on page twelve) No Student Tickets Left For 'As You Like It' No student tickets remain for the Canadian Players' performance of "As You Like It" by William Shakespeare, scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Friday in Schwab Auditorium. Ticket distribution for Friday's performance began at 1 p.m. yesterday, and tickets were gone before the H&zel Union ticket desk closed at 5 p.m. Tickets still remain for the matinee performance scheduled for 2:30 p.M. Saturday The distribution of student tickets for the group's perform ance of George B. Shaw's "The Devil's Disciple," scheduled for ; 8;30 p.m. Saturday, will begin at 9 a.m. Thursday and continue through Saturday or until all student tickets have been dis tributed. The sale of tickets to non students• for Friday's show and Saturday's Matinee will begin at 9 a.m. today and continue until Friday. Non-student tickets for Satur day evening's performance will go on sale Thursday at 9 a.m. arid continue through Saturday. Tick ets are $1.25. There will be a reception fol lowing Saturday's performance al Tau Kappa Epsilon hater- Political Party Platforms See Page 6 time has evidently come for the powers which signed the Potsdam agreement to give up the rem nants of the occupation regime in Berlin." The United States. Britain and West Germany all turned a cold shoulder on the idea. WASHINGTON (!P)--The Uni ted States yesterday bluntly rejected Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's call for an end to four-power occupation of Ber lin. (See Story on. Page Two) Khrushchev declared the West ern powers "long ago abolished that legal basis on which their stay in Berline rested" and on which rights of communications between West Germany and West Berlin depend. Weit Berlin is an occupied enclave 110 miles deep in Com munist East Germany. The So viet blockade of Berlin's trans ' portation lifelines in 1945-49 was beaten by an Allied airlift. Denouncing the Western pow ers, which he claimed had fos tered militarism in West Ger many, he declared: "And on top of everything they enjoy the right of unhampered c o m munication be tween West Berlin and West Ger many by air, rail, highways and the waterways of the German Democratic Republic (East Ger many), which they do not even wish to recognize." He said the Soviet Union had every reason "to free ourselves of those obsolete treaty obliga tions bound up with the Pots. dam agreement to which the Western powers are clinging." Let the three Western powers, he declared, "form their own re- Ilations with the German Demo cratici Republic and come to an laereement with it if they are in iterested in certain questions con cerning Berlin." He declared the Soviet Union will go to East Germany's aid if it is attacked by the Western powers. nity. Students who wish to at tend may sign up at the HU,3 desk. The Canadian Players opened their present tour with an ap pearance in Orillia, Ont., on Oct. 20, and toured Southern Canada. Dennis Carey, who has di rected at the Old Vic and Strat ford-on-Avon. will direct the company's productions. Earlier this year he produced "Mer chant of Venice" in the French language for the National Thea tre of Belgium just prior to the opening of the World's Fair. The acting company is the most representatively Canadian ye t sent on tour by the Canadian Players. There are actors in it from Vancouver, Regina, Winni peg, Toronto, Timmins and Mon .treal. Starring for the Canadian Play ers are Dawn Greenhalgh and Ted Follows. Both have been with the group for three years, and were recently married. FIVE CENTS
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