lattu VOL. 60. No. 18 STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 10, 1959 FIVE CENTS Lions Will Face Army In Big Game By SANDY PAD WE Collegian Sports Editor WEST POINT, N.Y., Oct. 10 -—A sellout crowd of 27,000 is expected here this afternoon when Penn State and Army clash in Michie Stadium. at 2 p.m. in one of the top Eastern grid games this season. Even with All-American half back Bob Anderson out of the Army lineup due to a knee in jury, the oddsmakers rate the Cadets a one touchdown favorite. Two - of ihe nation's . finest quarterbacks Richie Lucas of Penn State and Joe Caldwell of Army will direct their respective teams in today's game which could very well decide who wins the Ljambert trophy—symbol of Eastern foot ball supremacy. Lucas and Caldwell are evenly matched in every department. Lu cas is third in the country in to tal offense, while Caldwell is sev enth. Caldwell holds the edge over Lucas in thte pass completion de partment with 28 completions in 44 attempts for a percentage of .636. Lucas has hit on 24 of 38 for a .632 mark, fourth best in the nation. Penn Slate's biggest problem this afternoon, in addition to holding down Caldwell, will be to stop lonesome end Bill Car penter. He has snagged 14 Cald well aerials in two games. Carpenter is the fabled end who causes all sorts of trouble in the opposing team’s secondary. He never comes into the huddle and splits wide on every play. Because of his speed and de ception, the opposition is forced 1o place two men on him, leaving a hole somewhere in the defense. And Caldwell usually finds it. But Penn State coach Rip Engle and his fired-up Lions worked hard on pass defense all week and the Ripper says his boys are ready for Carpen ter. Engle plans to go with the same starting lineup which walloped Colgate, 58-20, last week. Lucas is the signalcaller. And he has Dick Hoak and Jim Kerr at halfbacks and Pat Botula at fullback. Henry Opperman and Norm Neff are the ends, Charley Jan erette and Tom Mulraney will be the tackles and Bud Kohlhaas and Bill Popp are the guards. Jay Huffman will be the center. There is only one change in Engle's alternate unit. Sopho more end Bob Mitinger moves up to take Dave Alexander's (Continued on page seven) Mens Council Elections Set Council officers for the Nit tany, West and North Halls elected residence areas will be Monday night. The unit presidents c areas, who were elected and Wednesday, will ,sit councils for their respect!' but may not run for a coi fice. Anyone living in a r hall area, except the unit may run for council offit inations will be from the Elections in Ihe.Nilla will be held at 7 p.rn. post office (Niitany 20} West Halls at 7 p,m. in ' lounge and in the Norll at 7 p.m. in the Warnot FOR A BETTER PENN STATE —Collegian Photo by Rick Bower A JOYOUS MOMENT for Ann Littlepage as she is ribboned by sister Margie Green in the Alpha Chi Omega suite last night. The ribboning ended two weeks of informal rushing. 170 Girls Ribboned As Rushing Ends One-hundred-seventy girls received bids yesterday as the two weeks of informal rushing ended for most girls with ribboning in their sorority sui Phi Sigma Sigma took 20 pi rush period. Chi Omega was sec ond with 17, Phi Mu third with 15, and Alpha Phi fourth with 13. Ribboning for all the girls ex cept those of Alpha Epsilon Phi, Sjgma Delta Tau, and Phi Sigma Sigma was at 7 last night. Girls in those sororities will be rib boned next Tuesday. Those girls libboned wove: Alpha Chi Omega: Jane Boyd, Beverly Gold, Susan Hayllar, Martha Kotchin, Diana Lindell, Ann luttlepage, Sue Macklem, Linda Web er, Gail Lenart; Alpha Delta Pi: Jacque line Johnston; Alpha Epsilon Phis Sheila Allison, Patricia Green, Judith Kahn, Linda Latt, Sheila Sky, Barbara Stanley, Judith Weiss. Alpha Gamma Delta: Janet Abele, Pa tricia Altimus, Suzanne Guiney, Fern Handwerk, Andrea Hermann, Anne Lessig, Helen Oakes, Yvonne Shinn, Mary Weaver, Karen Weston, Alpha Omicron Pi: Patricia' Bartram, Estella Brain, Muriel Decker, Judith Del- Dues, Barbara Riant, Mary Packer, Dorothy Rheiner, Sara Stultz, Chiistine Von Stock er; Alpha Phi: Mary Alice Cimmonß, Nancy Cooper, Carolyn Elhvood, Shirley Fowler, Julianne Horton, Jean Keiser, Sarah Mawhinney, Brenda Kambo, Diane Richard, Ruth Rulon, Barbara Schrader, Nancy Slease, Emilie Smith. Alpha Xi Delta: Anna Brash, Susan Brown, Theodora Buchholz, Marilyn Cha» pin, Margaret Colfax, Louise Ewing, Lin da Cavan, Virginia Starner; Beta Sigma Omicron: June Myers, Sophia Thomas. Chi Omega: Anne Bryan, Elizabeth Clark, Barbara E.nglehard, Jolene Frone ficld, Dana Garber, Dorrice Griffith, Janet Howard, Eleanor Knisley, Janet Lynch, Martha McGarvey, Jane Mac Gill, Susan Mong, Susan Moyer, Susan Mullin, Pene lope Pierce, Katherine Sweeney, Barbara Yatsko; Delta Delta Delta: Evalyn Bott. Diana De Angelis, Susan Newby, Alice Richards. Delta Zeta: Barbara Bonnell, Patricia Capuio, Janet Hughes, Dorothy Janus, Margaret Reed, Marian Shoemaker; Gam ma Phi Beta: Lois Blake, Cynthia Davis, Elsie Hall, Janice Harms, Patricia Kezell, Andrea Langen, Stephanie McCall, Mar gavet Miller, Mary Morgan, Eleanor New ference room. N The presidents of the Nittany and West Halls Councils were elected last spring under a new plan set up by the election com mittee of the Association of In dependent Men. In the future all council officers will be elected in the spring. Monday night all men living in residence areas will elect two representatives-&t-large who, in addition to serving on their coun cils will represent them on the AIM Board of Governors. • Officers of ihe Town Inde pendent Men's Council were elected last spring, but the dele gates from the student body who will sit on the council will be elected Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. ' Monday, the voting will be done f these Fuesday on the e areas, mcil oi- esidence officers, e. Nom floor.,' ny area in the in the Waring i :k con-' (EoUcgiart ledges, the largest group of this kirk, Sue Strehle, Loiraine Zemaitis; Kappa Alpha Theta; Jo Ann McFadden, Marcia Smith, Susan "Wheeler. 1 Kappa Delta; Barbara Blakslee, Bar bara Lukehart, Elizabeth Mulcey, Barbara Reber, Warrene Shxeve, Nancy Williams; Phi Mu; Kathryne Bauchspies, Nancy Dengler, Marsha Grinnen, Karen Hafer, Mary Houser, Bonita Ineitti, Nancy Les lie, Barbara Lewert, Charlotte Peters. Barbara Phillips, Donna Roberts, Susan Smart. Betty Stanley, Penelope TJplinger, Barbara Wilson, Phi Sigma Sigma: Nancy Alinkoff, Bon nie Bartash, Barbara Briskin, Charlotte Cohen, Lynne Engelbaqh, Andrea Gershe now, Atiele Haffner, Julia Heit, Susan Hopman, Marian Kaplan, Arlene Kirson. Barbara Kropf, Lois Mondell, Joan Na than, Sandra Neff, Judith Rosen, Yetta Rostolaky, Barbara Schermer, Rachelle Strasnick, Maiilyn Tcichholtz. Pi Beta Phi: Sandra Cervi, Judith Huist. Kay White, Linda Wyllie, Edith Young; Sigma Delta Tati: Barbara Fishkin, Lois Karlin, Joan Maics, Janet Rosenbeig, Linda Shapiro, Stephanie Shotz, Judith Sostmnn; Sigma Sigma Sigma: Jayne Buckley, Carolyn Coates, Joan Foss, Eliza beth Snyder, Elizabeth Taylor, Janet Tim lin. Thfia Phi Alpha: Joann Bandura, An toinetta Intili, Kathryn Kearney, liene McDonald, Carol Salerno; Zeta Tau Alpha: Bobble Graham, Barbara Jamison, Helen Medjcska, Joan Pamphilis, Ruth Salaman, Carol Skarada, Elaine Trama. Cool Weather Continues; Evening Showers Due Much cooler weather which moved into this area last night should continue today. The high will be a cool 58 degrees. Tonight should be clear and cold with an overnight low of 42 degrees. Tomorrow will be sun ny in the morning and mostly cloudy during the afternoon with showers beginning by evening. in Sackett lobby and Tuesday and Wednesday, at the Hetzel Union card room. Anyone living down town is eligible for a position on the council. Candidates will be selected by self-nominations. The Town Independent Men will elect 16 representatives- at large to sit on the AIM Board of Governors. The AIM elections rules allow two representatives at-large for every 500 students living in one area. Officers from on-campus coun cils and their representatives will attend the first fall AIM Board' of Governors meeting Wednesday night, but the TIM Council will not be able to send a full delega tion because of late elections, ac cording to AIM president, Harald Sandstrom. Eisenhower Uses Taft-Hartley Act To End Strike WASHINGTON (/P)—With union and industry hopelessly deadlocked, President Eisenhower set in motion Tafl-Hartley act machinery last night to end the 87-day-old steel strike. “If permitted to continue, this strike would imperil the national health and safety,” Eisenhower declared in a state ment announcing his action. I "The national inlerest de- ! mands an immediate resump tion of production in this vital ■ industry." The President named a three-man fact-findinp panel : and instructed it to report to him by Oct. 16. Since Eisenhower must have 1 this report before he can seek a 1 strike-ending court injunction,' the walkout may last at least an-i other week and perhaps several, days longer. j Such an injunction would send: the steelworkers back to the mills for up to 80 days If there is no! settlement in that time, the work ers would be free to walk out again, and the government would i have recourse then only to media-, tion It was the second time this , week that Eisenhower had in voked. the Taft-Hartley act’s: emergency provisions to halt a: strike he said endangered the. national health and safety. He! acted earlier to stop the doekj strike on the East and Gulf coasts, j The three named to the steel ! inquiry panel are George W. ! Taylor, Philadelphia; John Per- j kins, Newark, Del., president I of the University of Delaware, ' and Paul N. Lehoezky, Colum- i bus, Ohio, chairman of indus- j trial engineering at Ohio State ' University. Taylor and Lehoc-. I zky are seasoned labor arbilra- I tors; Ferkins is an expert in political science. j With a week to work, it was; expected the panel may try to : achieve a voluntary settlement 1 ' while at the same time amassing' data required for their report to 1 ; Eisenhower. j The President said he was in-j voking the Taft-Hartley act in the; steel strike with profound regret; that the industry and striking United Steelworkers of America; hadn’t been able to solve the dis pute on their own. “Nevertheless,” Eise nho w e r said, “I want to emphasize that the action I have taken in no way relieves the parties of their grave ’ obligation to the American peo ple to resume negotiations and reach a just and responsible set ! tlement at the earliest possible time." Foresters Compete In Annual Field Day Spit will splat, chips will fly and logs will roll today at the annual forestry field day at 1 p.m. at the University sawmill. Contestants will vie with each other in 10 events from tobacco spitting to log rolling. The tobacco spitting contest will be divided into two divisions. First there will be a distance contest to test the ability of the contestants with special distance spitting abilities. The other division will give the accu racy perfectionist a chance to build points. He’ll be aiming at targets. Log throwing is another sched uled event. The woodsmen will compete with each other by throwing 5-foot logs as far as they can. The balance perfectionist will get his chance in the “Bull of the Woods” contest. Here two contes tants mount at opposite ends of a log, advance toward each other and try to roll each other from the log. The Barrel Bronc gives .the bal ance perfectionist another chance. A barrel is strung between two trees, with a rope. A man mounts on the barrel while four others, two on each end of the rope, try Tickets for 'Rigoletto' Available The remaining tickets for Goldovsky Grand Opera The ater’s “Rigoletto” will be dis tributed at 9_a.m. today at the Hetzel Union desk. The third Artist Series program will be held at 8 p rn. tomoirow in Recreation' Hall. After ihe performance a re ception will be held for the cast and staff at Acacia fraternity at 225 E. Foster Ave. Students are invited to attend. The Goldovsky company is now on its fifth nationwide tour. It was founded as the Ne.v England Opera Company in 1946. bv Boiis Goldovsky. There are 50 members ,in the Theater, including actors, iactresses, musicians and stage I crew. The company is equipped .with new costumes and sets de signed by Jack Brown. Major roles will be filled by Jean Deis, Ronald Holeate, Jac queline Bazinet, Ara Berberian, Jean Kraft, James Berg, and Nan cy Williams. Goldovsky has long been as sociated with ihe operatic world. For 13 seasons he has produced such favorites as "Car men," "The Marriaqe of Figaro." "Rigolelto." and "La Boheme," as well as less familiar operas. He has also presented Saturday matinees over broadcasting net works from the Metropolitan Opera House for several years. Goldovsky prefers that his op eratic productions be given m English, as “Rigoletto” will be. He feels* that not only will the audience be able to understand the opera, but the public will be more critical of the acting. to throw him from the barrel by yanking at each end of the rope. The flying chips will be seen in the Log Chopping contest. He who chops the fastest and the mostest gets the most points. The contest is set up on a total point bases. He, who at the end of the afternoon has the most points is overall winner. The next five places wil also be awarded prizes. Prizes include Woolrich shirts, axes and saws. Other contests include log roll ing and log estimating. Log rolling puts strength of the lumberjack to test. Rolling'the heavy logs as far as possible is the object here. Log estimating consists of guess ing the number of board feet in a log. Transportation for interested students will- be provided at the HUB parking lot between 12:30 and 12:45 p.m;