The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 28, 1959, Image 1

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    'Snagi
Bp JEFF PO
More than
were sold for the
Carnival which w
out a snag Sat
the weatherman
!,000 tickets
. pring Week
• nt on with
, rday even
'cooperated.
vwd of 12,000
dway from 7
I e tickets for
and the food
An estimated cr I
which filled the m
to 12 - p.m. bought t
the student shows
concessions.
According to GI
business manager
another $l6OO was
for the food and $1
on the six amusemi
Carlson estimatec
ceipts for night 'WI
He said the commi
ceive 25 per cent
from the rides and
came to about $B7
David Epstein, c
man, said only one
issued all night.
Zeta Tau Alpha
to rewrite their s
could continue.
He said there as no other
trouble with any f the shows.
tpstein also said t ey had been
"lucky" with the 'eather.
It started to d izzle around
11:20 p.m. but no arpage to the
(Continued on page seven)
:raid Carlson,
of the week,
spent in cash
100 was spent
,nt rides.
[ the gross re
uld be $BOOO.
tee would re
if the money
the food. This
Today's Forecast:
Mostly Cloudy,
Showers
-VOL. 59, No. 130
Spikers Win
3 Titles At
Penn Relays
By•JOHN BLACK
The Penn State track and
field aggregation returned
from the Penn Relays as hold
ers of one record, two relay
championships and one indivi
dual championship its best,
showing in a decade at Frank
lin Field track carnival.
Not since the Nittany 4-mile re
lay team captured top honors in
1949 have the Blue and White
thinclads won any gold medals
in the annual "relay champion
ships of America" extravaganza.
But they ended this famine Fri
day and Saturday - when they won
two blue ribbons.
The proteges oil Coach Chick
Werner annexed fh e distance
medley and 4-mihs relay crowns
—the latter in rec. rd time—and
field man Jim Sc wab grabbed
individual laurels in the colleg
iate javelin thro
A strategy move hich gave the
Lions a good change of capturing
four team champi I nships—a feat
performed by only wo colleges in
65 years—was foil • d by a freak
accident when D
fell on the first le.
medley and Michi
Lions by six yards
The Lions made
sprint medley as
mile relay title w
pulled Moran fro
crew and placed
chor position on t
ley quartet.
This looked like
on paper becaus
2-mile foursome •
Bill Schwab, Ch
Dick Engelbrink
Michigan by 10 y
mile indoor relay
Daily News Ga
20.
And the presen•
the sprint lineup
Franklin Field Ou
ators to rework th
and install Penn
Fir calculations
state as a lead
his crown.
:fled half of this
plvennes' Tony
I,.rink in a stir
'-1 in the 2-mile
,f 1:52.5 for the
.9 of a second
n• nk , s clocking
page ten)
ing contender for
But Michigan spa
plan when the W
Seth outran Engel
ring anchor leg du
MI=EZI
I=M=El
taster than Engel,
(Continued on
Spring Week Carnival Grosses $BOOO
LACK
rnival chair
warning was
ells Chi and
ere ordered
OW before it
Queens, He-Men
To Vie Tonight
Athletics took the Spring
Week spotlight Sunday with
the preliminaries of the He-
Man and Queen of Hearts con
tests.
Twenty-nine persons have qual
ified for the finals. Under this
year's rules a winner in either
contest qualifies his partner in
the other contest.
Finals in both will be held at
6 tonight at Beaver Field. No
plans have been announced in
the event of rain.
First place qualifier in the
Queen of Hearts contest was
Julie Lloyd, Zeta Tau Alpha,
with 40 points.
Miss Lloyd scored six points
in the bowling event: tO in the
basketball foul shooting, hit
ting for 5 out of 12; and placed
first in the 25-yard crawl and
backstroke events for 24 points.
Edward Obrist, Delta Chi, was
qualified for the finals as Miss
Lloyd's partner.
Other qualifiers in the Queen
of Hearts contest, their sororities
and partners were:
2. Judy Clancey, Kappa Alpha
Theta; John Gander, Sigma Al
pha Epsilon; 3. Shirley Pittman,
Kappa Kappa Gamma; Richard
Hinkel, Alpha Sigma Phi; 4.
:ck HambrighC
IL of the sprint',
:an nipped the
in the 2-mile,
a bid for the
ell as the 2-
en Werner
' . the 2-mile
m in the an
e sprint med-
Red China Names Shao-chi President
TOKYO (In—Liu Shao-chi,
61, a Moscow-trained theorist
with a reputation for getting
things done, became president
of Red China yesterday.
a sound move
the Nittany
f Don Davies,
cis King and
lad beaten
rds in the 2-
i, t the Chicago
es on March
In succeeding to one of Mao
Tze-tung's old jobs for a four
year term, the tall, white-haired
son of a peasant family strength
ened his status as heir apparent
to the Chinese Communist party
leadership that Mao, 65, retains
in the Peiping hierarchy. Peiping
radio hailed Liu as "a leader sec
ond only to Mao Tze-tung."
Chou En-lai ' premier for 10
years, retained his job.
Red China's' Parliament, the
National People's C o n g r es s,
elected Liu to the presidency,
which Mao relinquishes to con
centrate on his duties as party
e of Moran in
!forced the
E ja board oper-
.4„,__....
at
5.....
,
•
. 4s,
13
4 g ;,\:...,„..,:-
‘ , ..., ,N ,
~,,.; co r gt an
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1959
Wendy Willett, Alpha Xi Delta;
Richard Pae, Beta Theta Pi.
5. Nancy Hillman, Alpha Ep
silon Phi; Thomas Edwards,
Delta Upsilon; 6. Ardie Phillips,
Alpha Delta Pi; Robert Shaw,
Acacia; and in a tie for seventh
place. Sheila Fox, Cross Hall;
Paul Bohn. Phi Kappa Tau; and
Polly McMichael, Gamma Phi
Beta; Kenneth Sink, Alpha
Gamma Rho.
Norm Neff. Phi Kappa Psi, took
first place in the preliminaries
for the He-Man contest No score
was available for any of the qua]-
if iers.
Neff aualified his nartner Carol
Seyschab, Aloha Phi.
Other qualifiers in the He.
Man contest and their partners
were:
2. Richard Anderson, Sigma
Nu; Lois Piercy, Delta
Gamma; 3. Richard Lucas,
Phi Delta Theta; Sandy Kleeb,
Delta Delta Delta; a tie for fourth
place between Mark• DuMars,
Delta Sigma Phi; Shiela Stohl,l
Kappa Delta; and Richard Bar
tolazzi, Theta Chi; Marie Busch,
Mac Allister Hall; 6. Theodore
Steinman, Zeta Beta Tau; no
partner; 7. Russ Lurch, Theta Xi;
Ina Hildegrand, Sigma Sigma
Sigma; 8. Thomas Edwards who
was also qualified by a partner
in the Queen of Hearts finals.
head. There was no other can
didate.
Th e 1157-member Parliament
approved Liu's nomination by the'
party's high command for chair
man—or president—of the gov
ernment of China's 650 million
people by a unanimous vote. Pei
ping radio described Parliament's
applause as thunderous. •
An indication that the high
command itself had not been so
singleminded in the nominating
session earlier this month came
from Peiping radio. Implying
there was some opposition to ele
vation of Mao's coldly efficient
aide, it said cryptically that Liu
"had the support of a large seg
ment of party members." There
long has been speculation in the
West that Chou and Liu are rivals
for Mao's mantle.
Vice president Marshal Chu
Teh, 72, a crony of Mao and
SGA Assembly
To Hear : udget
A greatly altered 1959-60 Student Government Associa
tion budget, reducing student government compensations by
$335, will go before the Assembly for approval tonight.
The 20-year-old AD-University Cabinet will relinquish
its legislative powers with the
Assembly members and the Stu
dent Government Association of
ficers at 8:30 p.m. in 203 _Hetzel
Union
The proposed budget eliminates
several positions from the list of
compensations. These positions
are: the four class presidents;
Orientation Week chairman; Tri
bunal chairman and members;
.Junior Prom and Senior Ball
chairmen and Spring Week pub
licity chairman. Compensations
for these positions total $285.
Several reductions in the
compensations remaining ar e
included in next year's budget.
The reductions are; Elections
Committee chairman from $5O
to $25; Public Relations Com
mittee chairman from $25 to
$2O; and Traffic Court chair
man from $7O to $35. Compen
sation for the editor of the Stu
ent Handbook was raised from
1 $lO to $25. The Student I
Gov
(Continued on page seven)
former warlord of Yunnan pro-
Vince, who had been considered
well in the running, was moved
instead into Liu's old job as
chairman of the Parliament's
standing committee. In this post
he will consult with Liu and
Mao on matters of government
policy.
Two new vice presidents were
chosen to handle the work the old
marshal had carried on alone.
They are Mme. Sun Yat-sen,
69, widow of the founder of re
publican China, and Tung Pi-wu,
73, an old friend of Mao who has
been president of the Supreme
People's Court.
Tung was replaced in the court
presidency by Hsieh Chu-tsai,
who has been interior minister
and an alternate member of the
Communist party Central Com
mittee.
Chief prosecutor Chang Ting
cheng was re-elected.
—Collegian Photo by Marty Scher,
Proudly Stands
Our Alma Mater
See Page 6
nstallation of 20 newly-elected
Tickets For
Bridges Talk
Available
Distribution of student tickets
for the lecture to be given by Sen.
Styles Bridges (R-N.H.), will be
gin at 9:30 a.m. today at the Het
zel Union desk.
Bridges, chairman of the Re
publican Policy Committee, ~i ill
present the third program in the
University Lecture Series at i 3
p.m. Thursday in Schwab Audi
torium.
Non-student tickets, priced at
$1.25, also will go on sale today.
All tickets will be honored until
10 minutes before the lecture
starts, when unoccupied seats
will be made available to the gen
eral public.
Following his graduation from
the University of Maine, Bridges
taught agriculture at Sanderson
Academy. Ashfield. Mass., then
worked with the state agriculture
departments of Maine and New
Hampshire.
In 1934, at the age of 36, he was
elected governor of New Hamp
shire. He was the youngest gover
nor in the country at the time.
Two years later, he was elected to
the U.S. Senate and he has been
elected to the Senate ever since.
As a freshman Senator, Bridges
spoke out against the threat of
Fascism in Germany and Japan
and later warned that Commu
nism constituted a po s t-w a r
threat. As a key member of the
Senate Appropriations Commit
tee he was responsible for secretly
providing the funds required for
development of the atomic bomb.
At the beginning of the 84th
Congress, Bridges was chosen
chairman of the Senate Republi
can Policy Committee.
FIVE CENTS