Mo an Runs Slow 4:09 Mi VOL. 59. No. 144 MI t Hon By SUSIE LINKROUM honesty system for the College of Mineral •en approved by the Senate Committee on An academic Industries has b Student Affairs. .f Mineral Industries is the first college to p and adopt such a plan. The College successfully set Elected fi Olewine 'Prof Sna By Students J. Harris Olewine, professor in the College of Chemistry and Physics has been elected Profes sor Snarf, "the most lovable prof on campus." , Anthony C. Richer, the College of Agriculture, was second place winner; Ralph H. Wherry, College of Business Administration, and Irving Michelson, College of En gineering and Architecture, tied for third place. The penny-v ot in g collected $136.97, The proceeds will go to the World University Service for foreign _students and schools in need of relief and aid. As first place winner, Olewine will receive a dinner for two at the Tavern and two tickets to the Cathaum Theater. Richer will re ceive two tickets to the Cathaum Theater. Wherry and Michaelson will receive prizes from Graham's Newsstore. The photographs used in the contest were donated by the Penn State Photo Shop. Engineers Award Medal to Walker President Eric A. Walker has been- named one of six civilian and military engineers to be awarded the Society of American Military Engineer's Bliss Medal. Walker will receive the award in recognition for his contribu tions to military engineering edu cation at the group's 39th annual dinner meeting Monday night in Washington, D.C. In its selection of Walker, the society thanked - him for applying "his great talents liberally to the improvement of the military and engineering instruction and the development of t •chnical leader ship in the ROTC Sprin $l5Ol Juri Niiler, told the Studen - I that the Stude niately $l5OO fri The exact fi are not paid, he Niiler cited sche l I as the major con, success of this ye j hairman of the 1959 Spring Week committee Government Association Assembly Thursday 4 t Scholarship Fund stands to gain approxi in this year's Spring Week proceeds. .ure is not available since all bills for expenses aid. Wing of events ribution to the r's program. The committe. recommended that next year' Spring Week program have t e award pre sentations on a separate night from the big-n-me entertain ment. This year' plan resulted in "an incohe -Id program," which put Awar•s Night in the rod. financially, because of the small attendant-, be said. Niiler called t is year's Float Parade ont.‘ of the best in recent years. He recommended, how ever, that the parade next year be held on the Thursday before Saturday's Carnival to provide lie Batig Institute r System The system will be put into effect next fall and will include only juniors and seniors. It will be installed on an individual cur riculum basis. Each curriculum will have the privilege to suspend the system with the approval of the department head, the dean of the college, the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, or the Honor [Council. Cases of alledged academic dishonesty will appear before an Honor Council, which will consist of one student from the MI Student Council and one student from each participating curriculum. The Honor Council will also ac quaint underclassmen with the system and prepare them for par ticipation. According to the charter, exams ' will be taken without the pres ence of a professor or official proctor. The charter states "After (passing out the exam papers and allowing sufficient time for prop er questiods regarding the exam, the professor in charge shall leave the examination room, returning at the end of the exam to pick up, the papers." Students who chose to par ticipate in the honor system are expecied to fulfill certain re sponsibilities. During an exam, if cheating by one individual is discovered by another, the stu dent is to warn the individual to stop cheating. If the cheating does not stop,' the student is obligated to report, the one cheating. Professors may arrange seating in an exam so as to minimize any temptation to glance at another student's paper. Weather to Be Warmer; Sunny Skies to Prevail . Sunny weather should continue today and tomorrow as tempera tures undergo a gradual warming trend. Today should be sunny and cool with afternoon temperatures reaching 57 degrees. Tonight is expected to be clear and cold with frost and possibly freezing temperatures. Week Nets for Student Aid extra• rain protection and to give organizations more time to pre pare their events. Assembly approved these two proposals. In other business, Robert La- Bar, chairman of the Mall bul letin board committee, reported that a new bulletin board will be erected during final exami nations week at the site of the present one on the Mali, The new bulletin board will coat an estimated $225 and will re place the present one, which had been condemned by Physical Plant. It was designed by a class in architecture, built by .an indus trial engineering class, and will be erected by Physical Plant. FOR A BETTER PENN STAT STATE COU,EGE. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 16, 1959 ToUrgiatt —Collegian Photo by Bob Thompson LOIS PIEBCY, senior in Education from Springfield is crowned Miss Centre County by last year's queen ; Jean Bixby, junior in Arts and Letters from State College, Miss Piercy will compete in the Miss Pennsylvania pageant in West Chester this summer; Lois Piercy Wins Beauty Contest Title Lois Piercy, senior in education from Springfield, was chosen Miss Centre County last night in Bellefonte. Miss Piercy wore a pink, full-length gown. She will re-' I ceive a gubernatorial scholarship—the largest prize ever to be given to a Miss Centre County winner—an evening gown, bathing suit and an all-expense paid trip to West Chester for the state finals in June, When asked if she thought 20 was the right age to marry, she said, "I guess I'll have to wait— I'm already 20." Miss Piercy told Joe Smiley, master of ceremonies, that she en tered the contest again this year because she had so much fun in the last one. The five finalists participated in bathing suit, evening gown and talent competition and were also interviewed. Miss Piercy displayed a paint ing entitled "Night Rain on the City" and played an original corn position on the flute. First runner-up was Patricia Grosso, senior in education from Gromyko Calls for German Unity 1 GENEVA (P)—Soviet For eign Minister Andrei Gromyko { called yesterday for prompt lsigning of a peace treaty with . each side of Germany. His de mand ran directly counter to Western hoes for a phased re-' unification of the divided na-I tion. Gromyko rebuffed the Western 30-month package plan for solv- ; ing the Berlin, German, and Eu ropean security problems, which provides for a peace treaty with an all-German government after unification. Speaking far 45 minutes at the Big Four foreign ministers conference, Gromyko declared attempts to handle these prob lems together would bring the By ELAINE MIELE Duquesne. She received a $2OO scholarship. Second runner-up was Marjorie Gordon, junior in education from Johntsown. She received a $lOO savings bond. The retiring Miss Centre Coun ty, Jean Bixby, junior in educa tion from State College, presented the crown to Miss Piercy. Also chosen as finalists were Marylynn Turki, junior in physi cal education from Cannonsburg; and Kay Binder, junior in busi ness administration from Allen town. Miss Piercy was first runner-up in last year's pageant and was selected Dairy Queen of 1959. talks "into deadlock from the very outset." "The Soviet government sees no other possibility than the con clusion of a peace treaty with the two German states," he said, "and, if a German confederation' is formed at the moment of the signature of the peace treaty, then with the German confederation as well." • The immediate reaction of the United States was disap pointment that Gromyko was standing pat on the Soviet line put forward by Moscow in a proposed draft treaty Jan: .10. That draft was rejected at the time by the Western powers. British Foreign Secretary Sel wyn Lloyd pointedly called Gro myko's attention to the fact the new Western plan, introduced Thursday, contains a number of concessions to the Soviet view point. *Provide for the conclusion of Foursome Loses To Stanford FIVE CENTS Special to the Collegial/ LOS ANGELES, May 15 (A) —Lt. Bill. Dellinger, of the United States Air Force. put on a burst of speed in the final yards and beat out Jerome Walters of the Southern Cali fornia Striders Club in the mile run in the Coliseum Relays here tonight. Dellineer's time wag 4 . 07 5. Ed Moran, Penn State track captain, finished a disappointing third in 4:09.5. Walter's second place time was 4.08.2. Dellinger, formerly of Ore gon, fought off Walters just be fore the finish line. Walters had taken over the lead from 8 tir ing Moran. Moran had jumped into the lead 220 yards from home, but tired perceptibly and finished third. Moran. the hope of the East, was shooting for a sub 4-minute mile, and track experts thought that this was the night he might do it. He ran a 4:02.1 in a dual meet against Michigan State last week but dropped seven seconds below that on the Coliseum's grass track here tonight. Penn State's underdog two mile relay team ran their fast est time-ever, but lost the race to Stanford in the final lap. Stanford's anchor man, Ernie Conliffe, overcame a short lead which the Niltany Lions' Chick King had on the last lap io give the Indians the victory In 7:27.3. Penn State's time was 7:27.9. Stanford's winning foursome included Dick Lassen, Bertil Lundh, Don Chesarek and Con liffe, Southern * California finished third in the relay going the dis tance in 7:32.2. Southern Cal had jumped to the lead during the first 880 with Stanford trailing in second and Penn State third. Running strong, the USC thinclads built up a wide lead over Stanford with ,Penn State far back in• third 'after the next two laps. ' But by the time the Lions Dick Engelbrmk took the baton for the third time, Stanford had pulled into first. Engelbrink stuck right with them, passing the Tro 'jan runner and with a burst of speed took a momentary lead near the end of the leg and then the anchor men King and Con liffe hooked up in a stirring duel to the finish. Conliffe had a small lead and King couldn't overhaul the Stanford 'speedster, finishing a step behind. -- The Lion 'quartet of King, Dick 'Engelbrink, Bill Schwab and Don Davies clipped almost eight sec onds off their previous low time of 7:35.6 which was run indoors this winter. The Lions, third seeded before the race, beat out la highly-touted Southern Cal ba ton crew to grab second place medals. peace with the Bonn Republic and East Germany on the basis of their borders as of last New Year's Day. This would amount to official German renunciation of Eastern German territories now administered by Poland and ,the Soviet Union and' keep the ;present Eastern German boun dary on the Oder-Neisse line. •Provide for the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Ger man territory and limit the size of- the national German forces. *Call for 'he absolute neutral; ity of West and East Germany, forbidding them , to be members of either the North Atlantic Al liato.:e or the Warsaw Pact. *Look to negotiations between the two German states for Ger man confederation. Until unity was achieved, West Berlin would have the status of a "demilitar ized free city," which would mean the withdrawal of Western gar risons.