The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 14, 1959, Image 1
Today's Fore ash 4 -• "; or Shove _ , VOL. 59. No. 105 Lion EIW Lehig ITHACA; N, wrestling team 55th annual Eas tournament here. The Lions, w Monday's IFC Meeting Cancelled The Interfraternity Council has cancelled its . Monday night meet ing because of a lack of candi dates for the three _MC offices. Edward Hintz, IFC president, said the Executive Committee de cided -Thursday night to postpone election of officers until April 6., Final nominations for officers will be held March 23. Hintz asked all interested can didates for the three positions— pre s i dent, administrative vice president, and secretary-treasurer —to submit a letter of applica tion to him . Fraternity presidents and IFC committee chairmen are eligible for election. At the March 23 meeting, the IFC will also vote on a proposal to eliminate .compensations for the president and executive vice president and eliminate the posi tion of executive vice president. The IFC hired a part-time sec retary three weeks ago to man age its Fraternity Affairs Office. The secretary replaces the FAO junior secretaries and the execu tive vice president. Part of the secretary's salary will be paid from $175 to be saved if officers' compensations are eliminated. The president now receives $lOO and the execu tive vice president $75. Dance Company Will Perform An addition to the Artists Series schedule—the Dance Drama Company—will perform at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Schwab Auditor'um. Distribution pany Will begin - Non-student ticke sale at 9 ELM, Tu: each. There are 101 ets and 100 non-s f student tickets for the performance com !t 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Hetzel Union desk. will go on isday for $1.25 !() student tick dent tickets, The 8-member turing Emily Fr the different types drama and music. raphers, Miss Fra Ryder—founder. o —have combined company's reperti Miss Frankel a ed the company then the group' legitimate theat civic and comet with symphony o television. The company all in many major , —in 600 American Canada, to Israel.' Featured with is Ronnie Lee, - a guest perfo .1 television shows atmen Lead Tournament; in Second By LOU PRATO Sports Editor ~ March 13 Penn State's well-balanced ormed into the quarter final lead at the ern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association on the Cornell University campus. o finished the dual meet season with a 5-3 record, hold a three point spread over pre-tourney favorite Lehigh, 17-14, as the mat carnival enters the semi-final round. Coach Charlie Speidel will send five of his eight entries into tomorrow afternoon's ac tion, but arch rival Lehigh will counter with six semi-finalists. And in two of the matches, Penn State and Lehigh clash head-on. Guy Guccione, fourth seeded at 137 will tangle with the Engi neers' defending Eastern titlist Dick Santoro—tbe top seeded man at this weight—and unseed ed George Gray will meet top seeded Thad Turner at 167. The Lions' other semi-final en trants include third seeded Dan Johnston at 130, first seeded Sam' Minor at 147, and unseeded Johns ton Oberly at heavyweight. Johns ton faces Army's tourney veteran Jerry Wisenseel, Minor clashes with Franklin and Marshall's Neil DeLozier, and Oberly tangles with the defending Eastern heavy weight champ Dave Dunlop of Cornell. All of Penn State's entries got through this afternoon's per liminary round, but Don Wil son (123), Neil Turner (157) and Hank- Barons (177) were eliminated- in tonight's quar ter-final action. Barone's loss, a 7-4 decision to Army's once-beaten Art Bair was one of the tourney's major up sets and could have an important bearing on the final team stand ings. A Barone win—as the seed ing committee had predicted when they placed him fourth at 177 would have given Penn State a more even chance against the Engineers. For he would have been the Lions' sixth semi-final• ist and would have been facirr (Continued on twee riblp) peered on Broadway in Peter Pan, Plain and Fancy, Mr. Wonderful and West Side • Story. Other featured members of the company are Zebra Nevins, for mer soloist with the Metropolitan Opera Company Ballet Company; Eloise Remsay of the American Ballet Theater Company; and Terence Moore, formerly a dancer in movies and a classical ballet soloist in New York. !company, fea , kel, combines of dance with Five choreog kel and Mark the company Ito create the Ryderd Ryder start lin 1950. Since as played in r, university, I nity concerts, hestra and on A film otthe company's per formance on a Canadian Broad casting System program won the group the International Award for the Finest Dance Program on Television in 1956; 57. The competition included such American network pro grams as Omnibus. o has appeared .ance festivals I l cities and from Miss' Frankel ho has been er on major and has ap. The- company has been further honored by having some of 'its numbers used by the New York City Ballet and the Berlin Ballet. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 14. 1959 NEW WSGA OFFICERS are, left to right, Jessie Janjigian, presi dent; Marjorie Ganter, second vice president; Ellen Butterworth, secretary; and Martha Shipp, treasurer. Absent from the picture is Susan First, first vice president. Literary Magazine To Be Sold Monday Circa, literary magazine, containing 11 articles and poems by students and professors, will be on,sale Monday and Tues day at•2s cents a copy. This is the second year of publication for Circa, formerly called "The Lantern." The current issue is sponsored by the Artists' - Series Committee. One piece of prose in the pub lication is "Not Quite Saturday," by Matthew Robinson, 1958 grad uate. The story concerns a man who is adrift on a raft somewhere in the ocean. With his food sup ply very low, he imagines him self near death, and recalls his short life and repents his many sins. Also - included is "The Trades- Man," by Jerold Roschwalb, in structor in the English Depart ment, a story about a somewhat cynical Jew who was raised in a European ghetto. The Jew, known Is Raphael Pincus, emigrates to he United States after the pseu lo pogroms (mass slaughter of sews) in 1918. He tells his life's tory, with all its misery and grief o another, and confesses that he' vas forced to be a tradesman in lurope since his religion pre-1 , ented him from his holding a 'otter position. In "Modern Poetry and the 7 roubled Reader," Robert G. Col ins explains the structure of nodern poetry and its evolution (Continued on page too) Macmillan Ends Bonn Talks; July Summit Meeting Possible LONDON (AP)—Prime Minister their two days of talks. Harold Macmillan flew back from The Macmillan -Aden suer Bonn last night with broad West talks; had begun under a cloud German and French support of uncertainty. Adenauer was for a program leading to summit known to have misgivings over talks with the Soviet Union by Macmillan's visit to Moscow 'July, British sources reported. last week. The West Germans Macmillan hopes, on a flying trip to Washington next week, to win President 'Eisenhower's en dorsement of the plan for East- West negotiations on German and other European problems. Essential features of the pro gram, designed to achieve a set tlement of the Berlin crisis and a relaxation of the cold war, al ready have been cleared by key Allied- governments during nor mal diplematic exchanges. In Bonn, Chancellor Konra (11 Adenauer said he and Macmillan "achieved complete unity" in rgiatt Cold, Warm Air To Begin Battle In the next 36 hours Penn State may .feel the effects of an ap proaching battle. The winner will determine whether umbrellas or snowshov els are the order of the day. Weatherwise, Pennsylvania is , in quite a predicament. Very warm air is advancing toward Pennsylvania from the south ands cold air is sliding southward across Central Canada to oppose it. With a storrn developing in the Southern plains today, a battle for control of the weather may take place. A victory on the part of the warm air will result in rain, melt ing snow and floods. If the cold air wins, Pennsylvania may find itself in the midst of another snowstorm by tomorrow. Cloudy skies and a few light snow flurries are likely today (Continued on page four) and the French have favored a much tougher approach to the Soviets than the British have. But apparently Macmillan's re port to Adenauur on his talks with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev swept away German misgivings. Macmillan and A denauer ranged over the Soviet threat tsy Western-occupied West Berlin, the, problem of German unifica tion and European security. It was evident that the possi bility of offering the Soviets a militarily thinned-out zone in re Doors Closed To Coeds See Page 4 Cabinet Sets New Ruling For Election Expense Lists Not Required By CATHY FLECK Political parties will not be responsible to All-University Elections Committee for cam paign expenditures . during elections this April. All-University Cabinet Thurs day night approved a recommen dation presented by Lynn Ward, Elections Committee chairman, that the present financial limits imposed on the political parties by the Elections Code be elimi nated. Also, the dates for • the elec tions were set back one week to make it easier to put into effect student government re organization which is now being considered by Cabinet. Elections will be held April 22, 23 and 23, preliminary nomina tions on March 22, final nomina -1 lions April 5 and campaigning will begin April 13. Elections will be decentraliZed by locating the polls in classroom buildings and the Hetzel Union Building. Funds collected by political parties for publicity purposes will be deposited _with the Associated Student Activities fund. Publicity and campaign ma terials will be ordered by re quisition forms secured through the ASA office. The office will then pay all bills incurred by the parties from the amounts deposited. Miss Ward proposed this sys tem as a substitute for a recom mendation from the 1958 En campment which would make Cabinet responsible for regulat ing party finances. The commit tee felt it would become a burden for Cabinet if more than two parties were in existence. The committee also felt that by shifting responsibility to the parties, more responsibility would become inherent in student poli tics. All-U Elections Committee All-University Elections Com mittee will meet at 6:15 p.m. to morrow in 121 Sparks to discuss plans for student council elec tions. turn for a political settlement of the explosive Berlin question was one of the main subjects of dis cussion. This will be taken up again in Washington. A British spokesman said that nothing had occurred in either Paris, where Macmillan con ferred with President Charles de Gaulle earlier this week, or in Bonn to deter the British from pressing,Eisenhower to ac cept the thinned-out zone as one of the ideas to present to the Soviets. A German spokesman said West Germany had no objection to [thinning out 'military forces in a [certain geographical area as long [ as it was a step toward general (disarmament and was subject to controls. The area was not de- I fined. FIVE CENTS