SATURDAY. MAY 16. 1959 6 Speakers Chosen For Competition Six finalists have been chosen for the John - Henry Frizzell Ex tempore Speaking Contest. The finalists are Emily Bradley, Sheila Cohen, Mar' Ann Ganter, Joan Kemp, Jacq eline Leavitt and Marilyn West. The final compe place 7 p.m. Mond trical Engineering. ition will take y in 110 Elec- The contest is s Department of S of Frizzell, form: chaplain and head ment of Speech. 1946 with the ran The finalists w different topic t.ha, in the elimination were held last Mot •nsored by the l eech in honor ,rly University of the Depart- He retired in of emeritus. 11 speak on a the ones used eetings which day. Miss Bradley h Strings Attached' 'Progressiveness, Miss Ganter, "D self"; Miss Kemp, ter—Man of the H vitt, "Clothes for Miss West, "Ap cans." Each finalist wi 1 speak from 8 to 10 minutes on h r topic. First prize in th contest is $5O and the John Henry Frizzell award of merit. econd prize is $25 and the award of merit. Frizzell will be honorary chair man at the finals and will pre sent the awards. s chosen "No WMiss Cohen, ere We Come"; n't Kid Your `Christian Her ur"; Miss Lea lidbing"; and thetic Arneri- Men's Dorms Program To Include Field Events The Nittany and West Hall Field Day programs will be held from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. today. The Nittany program, to be held on Nittany Field, will- in dude competition ranging from track events to a frisby throw. The West Halls program, which will be held on Intramural Field, will include various events. Torre Press By NEAL FRIEDMAN Marie Torre, radio-telelision columnist for the New York Herald Tribune who served a jail term rather than tell a court the source of a news story, will speak to a luncheon of the Penngylvania Press Con ference at noon today in the Nittanv Lion Inn. Miss Torre spekt 10 days in .a New York city j after she re fused to tell the judge in a libel case the source of some alleged defamatory remarks about a well known movie actress. "Faith, Hope and Public Opinion" will be the topic of Miss Torre's speech. James S. Lyon, executive vice president and general manager of the Observer Publishing Co,, Washington, Pa., and D. Lee Stod dard, co-publisher of the Elkand Attention 1960 Graduates Juniors who do not plan to live on campus the ( first eight weeks of the fall 1959 semester must have La Vie photo taken next week Shop. at the Penn State Photo 9:15-4: Musk Group To Go National The Louise Homer Club will become the 82nd chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national music hon orary fraternity, which is a mem ber of the Professional ,Pan-Hel lenic Association. The chapter name will be Al pha Theta. Members of the Psi chapter at Bucknell will initiate' the new members in ceremonies today in Carnegie Hall. Those to be initiated are: Mary Rohrbeck, president: Judy Stasch, vice president; Joan Ri ser, recording secretary; Dorothy Williams, co r responding secre tary; Marie Aquilina, Sandra Sliker, Antoinette Monastero, Mary Ann Zook, Sonja Brown, Gale Leister, Mona Sweet, Har .riet Slamp, Virginia Mensh, An nette Saurino, June Morrini, Ruth Thompson, Carole Young, Georgene Cooper, Carole Shol lenberger. Eleanor Hansen. Mar jorie Brewster, Anna Belle Sny der, Elizabeth Taylor, Carole Toklish, and Dr. Frances An drews and Mrs. Bertha Maraffie, faculty members. Two Councils Plan September Mixer The Home Economics StUdent Council will hold a combined mix er with the Business Administra tion Student Council on Septem ber 16 of Orientation week. The mixer was approved at the council meeting Tuesday. Linda Miller and Linda Brinsley were named co-chairmen of the home economics program durirtg Orien tation Week. Helen Skade, president of Mor tar Board, resigned her position as member of the council. Judith Heckert, president of the council, appointed Pat Niedbala, junior from Hamburg, N.Y., to replace her. Judith Geary, freshman from Williamsport was appointed stu dent faculty board alternate. to Address Conference Journa 1, received distinguished service awards at a dinner last night at the Nittany Lion Inn. Carl E. Lindstrom, visiting pro fessor of journalism at the Uni versity of Michigan. was scheduled 4 o speak last night, but failed to arrive in time. Lindstroni will ad dress the meeting this morning. George N. Scheid, president of the Interstate Advertising Man ager's Association and advertis ing director of the Tarentum Valley Daily News, will speak to the Keystone Press Awards dinner of the press conference on "The Ninth Column." The press conference, which be gan yesterday, is an annual event sponsored' jointly by the Pennsyl vania Society of Newspaper Edi tors, the Pennsylvania Newspaper Publisher's Association, the Penn sylvania Women's Press Associa tion and the School of Journalism. daily except neon and Saturday LaVie Senior Board THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Mansfield Urges End To U.S. Foreign Aid WASHINGTON (EF)—Sen. Mike Mansfield (D.-Mont.) proposed yesterday halting all foreign economic aid other than loans within three years. He also urged reductions in military aid and said secrecy labels should be stripped from the amounts given each country. Mansfield, assistant Democratic leader, said "time is runn Atomic Plane Was Quarles' Last Request WASHINGTON (I?) The last decision Donald A. Quarles made;' before he died a week ago was. to make an appeal to President Eisenhower to push development , of an atomic-powered airplane. ' This word was given yesterday by Lt. Gen. Roscoe C. Wilson, Air Force deputy chief of staff for development. Wilson said the final technical obstacle to construction of an ex— perimental nuclear-powered plane has been overcome. This, he said,' involved shielding of crew and equipment from radiation. He declined to say how the shielding problem was solved. But he said that if go-ahead funds are obtained "it shouldn't take many years for the nuclear-powered air plane to be in the air." Wilson digressed from a pre pared speech before the Aviation Writers Assn. to make mention of Quarles, deputy secretary of de fense who died in his sleep , last Friday of a heart ailment. Wilson said that "Secretary Quarles' last decision was that the Defense Department and the Atomic Energy Commission would appeal to the President for the power to expedite nuclear aircraft development." ZBT's Annual Marriage Party This Afternoon The Biggest Combine of the Year ZBT and THETA CHI join for the last blast Pat "The Cat" Soundin: at Theta Chi -- 501 Fairmount & S. Allen Plus TONIGHT Don't go to the movies -- the show's at ZBT Everybody Gets Married The Fabulous Pat "The The Cookin' One COOKIE DOUGLAS Penn State's Answer to Dakota -- FRIEDA LEE •Everybody Welcome for Both Sessions• program must be drastically cur tailed if it is to continue. Unless this is done, and eco nomic aid is shifted from gifts to loans, he told the Semite, the next session of Congress "may well see a tide of public reaction so strong it will swamp the en tire undertaking." Most of Mansfield's proposal, except for elimination of sec recy classifications, would go into effect July 1, 1960, al though it would be written into the bill carrying funds for the year starting next July 1. President Eisenhower has asked ,'53.9 billion for all foreign aid next year. The principal proposal would require the administration to sub mit next year a detailed plan for progressive yearly reduction of grants or gifts for defense sup port and economic assistance. Mansfield specified such grants shoulcl reach "zero for each such nation over a maximum three-year period." Military aid, for which the President is asking $1 billion for the year starting July 1, would be continued under, Mansfield's proposal, but on a reduced basis. Grants for defense supports, for which Eisenhower is asking 835 million dollars for fiscal 1960, would be eliminated entirely by June 30, 1963. Stock Market Declines NEW YORK (IP) News that leading banks had boosted inter est rates upset the stock market yesterday. It declined under a wave of late selling. 8:30 p.m. -- 1 a.m. Featuring Cat" and his Kittens 2-5 p.m. ng out on foreign aid" and the Steel Talks Now Emphasize Basic Issues NEW YORK (I?) Steel wage talks that could have a strong bearing on the nation's economy got down to bedrock issues yes terday. "We're really in basic discus sions now," said David J. McDon ald, United Steelworkers presi dent, after a two-hour bargaining session between four-man man agement and union teams. R. Conrad Cooper, chief indus try negotiator, said the teams had "good exploratory discussions." But as the talks recessed until Tuesday, neither would elaborate on what was discussed. The union announced a- the be ginning of the talks May 5 that it would seek substantial wage in creases and shorter working hours among other proposals. Failure to reach an agreement by June 30 when the present three-year contract expires could lead to a strike by half a million steelworkers and cut off 90 per I cent of the nation's steel produc i tion. President Eisenhower has coun seled against any settlement that would spur inflation through steel price increases. The industry has proposed a one-year freeze on wages and other benefits to hold the line against inflation. Monforte PAGE THREE