Today's Forecasi Snow, Colder VOL. 59. No. 78 Feldstei Report Fees, H All-University Cabinei reports on the imposs getting a breakdown c fees and the reaction of of Trustees to the Het expansion program. All-University president Jay Feldstein will present 'these re ports at 7 tonight in 203 Hetzel Union. Feldsiein and Agriculture Stu dent Council president Robert Laßar, after confering with Dean of Admissions Robert G. Bernreuter about student fees, found that the fees are not broken down and distributed. They discovered that student fees as well .as other income allocated to the University are compiled into one large sum which is then distributed for various operating expenditures. This investigation was request ed by Laßar at the last Cabinet meeting of the fall semester. La- Bar wished to find out just how the student fees were spent and how the centers and campuses fit into these expenditures. The total amount of all sources of income, including fees, is out lined in President Eric A. Walk er’s “Report to the People of the Commonwealth” which contains all pertinent information concern ing the University. Carmella LaSpada will pre sent the final plans for Larry Sharp Week for the approval of Cabinet. Cabinet will also hear a report by Ellen Donovan on the extension of library hours during the final examination period. Frank Pearson, chairman of the town affairs committee, will re port on the impossibility of in stalling traffic lights at College Ave. and Pugh St. and College Ave, and Garner St. Pearson said that because of the plans for the cloverleaf intersection, installa tion of new traffic lights will have to be postponed for at least one year. County March of Dimes To Sponsor 'Fly-Away' The Centre County March of Dimes organization will sponsor a special “Fly-Away” promotion at the University Park Airport from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Tickets for flights in Cessna and Piper airplanes, flown by Civil Aeronautics Administration certi fied commercial pilots, will be sold at $2 for single-engined planes and $5 for twin-engined rides. In case weather postpones Saturday’s rides the entire promo tion will be held on Sunday. 8 Survive 65 Killed in Jet Crash NEW YORK ( '/P) —Sixty-five persons were presumed dead yesterday in the cfash of a spanking new turbo-jet Amer ican airliner into the East River near LaGuardia Field. There were only eight known survivors. Radio ground equipment that might have averted t ie disaster was not available to the ultra modern airliner, although La- Guardia is one of the lusiest air ports in the world. Twenty-two bodies had been recovered from the icy tidal wa ters of the river after the shat tering Tuesday midnig it crash in rain and fog. The plane was loaded to ca- Site QMegi 1 will hear sibility of Df student the Board ; :el Union —Collegian Photo by Marty Schorr "DOWN A LITTLE/' directs Ralph Hosterman, supervisor in charge of bakery production, to Samuel Sprout, stock selector. The lift is used in moving and storing stock in the new foods service building addition. (Story on Page 2) Open Lecture Topics May Be Published A weekly list of professors who could open their classes to any student and their lecture topics for that week may be posted in the Hetzel Union Building by March if the idea gets enough support from faculty members and college deans. This plan was proposed by All-University President Jay Feldstein and the Inter-College Council Board following the re cent University Senate announce ment that students may sit in on any lecture with the lecturer’s permission. Ai Tuesday night's meeting of the ICCB, Feldsiein asked ' each member to present the suggestion for publishing a lec ture topic list to the faculty meeting of his college or to the dean of his college, who would then present it at the faculty meeting. Each council member would then report to Feldstem at the next ICCB meeting what percen tage of the faculty is in favor of having the list and any sugges tions for carrying out the plan or possible substitutes for it that might be suggested. If the idea is received favor ably enough, Feldsiein plans to send a letter to each faculty member asking if he would be willing to participate in the (Continued on page four) parity with 68 passengers and a crew of five. Among those be lieved killed in the crash was Beulah Zachary, producer of the Kukla, Fran and Ollie tele vision show. Survivors included an 8-year old Long Island schoolboy, whose family—parents and two sisters— were wiped out In the crash. Three crew members were saved. Many of the missing were be lieved strapped to their seats, en tombed in the tangled wreckage at the bottom of the river. Other bodies were swept into Long Is land Sound by the relentless river current. A floating derrick was sent to the scene to raise the wreck age. The four-engine Lockheed Elec-; tra—in service on American Air-! lines only 12 days—smashed into FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA., THURSDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 5. 1959 By CAROL BLAKESLEE Missing Bust Wasn't Really Gone at All Campus patrolmen conducted a frantic search of Sparks Building yesterday morning for the little man who was there all the time. Dean Ben Euwema of the Col lege of the Liberal Arts sum moned the Campus Patrol about 9:05 a.m. yesterday after he walked into the lobby of Sparks Building and noticed the bust of Dr. Edwin Earle Sparks, a former president of the University, was missing from its pedestal. The Campus Patrol conducted a complete investigation in true FBI style including taking finger prints from the pedestal. • Dr. Frederick R. Matson, the (Continued on page four) the river at 135 m.p.h. about half a mile from the end of the run way. Said one survivor: “Just as we were about to land there was a sudden jolt and then an awful lot of noise and we were in -the water.” The pilot had given no hint of trouble. Pending a fuller investi gation, it appeared that he simply came in too low in the mist that enveloped the area. Tha airliner was on course toward LaGuardia's runway No. 22,. ..coming down from the northeast. At that end of the runway there was radio beam . equipment to tell the pilot whe ther he was on course. But there was no accompanying ; radio beam to tell him whether !he was coming in too high or too 1 (Continued on page two) PhysEd Exemption For Vets Refused Requests for veterans exemptions from physical educa tion have been turned down again. The Senate Committee on Educational Policy gave a ilat “no” to All-University Cabinet on its recommendations made in November. According to a report prepared for today’s Senate meeting, the policy committee de-i cided that military service is ir relevant to meeting the general education objective pertaining to physical education. 1 [ The report states that, aftei careful study and discussion, the committee voted that ‘'existing Senate policies and regulations concerning physical education ap ply to all students ” All-Universily President Jay : Feldstein gave Cabinet's argu ment tor veterans' exemptions at the November meeting and the senators sent the issue to the policy committee. It had been turned down on several : previous requests. 1 As regulations now stand, vet erans are required to take four semesters of physical education, the same as other men students. In addition to stating that mil- i ilary service is irrelevant to the ! physical education objectives, j the report continued that the existing regulations and policies adequately cover individual in stances of greater age, physical disability and demon strated i competence. | In other business, the Senate will hear a report on general ed-j ucation. The general courses were] adopted two years ago on a trialf basis. The Senate committee on| courses of study will begin a re view of these courses this semes-' ter and make recommendations 1 at a meeting later in the year. J-Ctuh to Hold Mixer For Journalism Majors A mixer for all journalism stu- , dents will be held at 7 tonight in\ McElwain lounge. j The mixer is sponsored by the! J-Club, newly-organized jour-| nalism student association Two films, one concerning the Univer-| sity campus and one showing how, a national magazine shoots a pic-! ture story, are scheduled to be shown. ! A short business meeting and refreshments will follow the films. 1 Reds Free Convoy After Sharp Protest HELMSTEDT, Germany (/P) —Under sharp attack by the United States, Soviet authorities yesterday turned loose a U.S. Army truck convoy they had held in East Germany for 53 hours. The four-truck convoy and its five grim soldiers rolled into West Germany, past the checkpoint on the border between East and West Germany, at 8:12 p.m. That was after the U.S. State | Department, backed by President; Eisenhower, had delivered a stiff protest to Moscow against any interference with the Western Al lies’ access to Berlin. The convoy, en route from Ber lin to West Germany, was de tained Monday afternoon with in sight of tho East-West bor der. The Soviet army demanded an, inspection of the cargoes. But, Findley Burns Jr., polnical ad-’ viser to the U.S., Army mission ini East Berlin who came here fori the final negotiations said the So viets were not allowed to inspect the inside of the trucks. The United States thus won a point in US'efforts to prevent the To ward Liberal Minds See Page 6 Cold Spell, Light Snow Predicted A diop in temperature is pie dicted for today, as the storm system responsible for the clouds and ram during the past two days moves off the Atlantic coast. The weather will be fair, though a mass of Arctic air following the storm system will keep temp eratures below freezing into Sun day. i Light snow this morning will I change to occasional snow flurries later in the day, with a possible iaccumulation of one to two in ches. This afternoon will be partly cloudy, windy and colder. Tonight and tomorrow will be fair and much colder. The temperature will remain near 30 degrees this afternoon, dropping to 12 late tonight. To morrow’s high will be 21 degrees. —Joel Myers ; Collegian Forecaster Activity Cards Available Activity cards for freshmen, sophomore and junior women are now available in the dean of wom en's office The cards will be used by hat societies in selecting mem bers. Soviets from gradually clamping a stranglehold on the highway supply line to Berlin, isolated 110 miles behind the Iron Curtain. Following three U.S. Army protests Tuesday in Berlin and Frankfurt, President Eisenhow er announced to his news con ference yesterday that a vigor ous demand was being made by the State Department for release of the convoy. He said the Unit ed States never had allowed the USSR inspection privileges. The State Department note re leased later said refusal to let the tracks through without in spection was a “clear violation” of American rights, under four power agreements since 1945, to free access to Berlin. Burns declined to give any de tails of his 2% hours of negotia tions here for release of the American convoy. FIVE CENTS