Weather Avec Warm, Hum Thundorstor VOL. 60. No. 145 Sprin Sho The Spring W $5OO more than la were sold at this of the committee Thursday night. Caplan said th Homemade Rocket ,Hits Nittany Area A four - foot home - made rocket, buried 14 inches in the ground, was discovered in the Nittany area late last night by a dorm counselor. The rocket, made of aluminum conduit with a crimped "nose" and affixed with three galvanized steel fins, was found about 10 o'clock by Charles Starbock be tween Nittany 22 and 23. The rocket wal evidently launched by a chemical pro pellant. The bottom open end of the tube which was about 1 1 / 2 inches in diameter was caked with burnt chemicals which gave off a pungent odor. Jerry Whalen, Nittany coordin ator, started an immediate In vestigation. "If the rocket had hit a man, it could have 'killed him," Wha len said. "In fact with the crimped nose and apparent force with which it landed, it would have had a good-- chance of going through the roof if it had landed on one of the dorms." Whalen said a student, who is a member of the Rocket Club on campus, speculated that the rocket would have had to sail several hundred feet into the air to fall with enough force - to burrow 14 inches into th e ground. He also guessed it would have had to be launched from a solid surface and not from the ground. From the angle at which it en tered the ground, he estimated that it was launched straight up. The attachment of the fins in dicated considerable workmanship and the rocket was brightly labeled Zip 111. The letters BROC and USAF also were painted on the tube and fins. SGA OK's Encampment Appointments The SGA Assembly Thurs day night approved th e recommendations for Student Encampment ap t ointees sub mitted by Robe it Umpstead, Encampment Ch. irman. Those appointe . are Patricia Dyer, Marianne llis, Marjorie Gantor, Patricia H gan, Catherine Hershey, Elizabet Ingly, Gage Peck and Martha ilson. Charles Bere ts, Benjamin Bronstein, Robert arson, Michael Dzvonik, Robert .Falzone, Earl Gershenow, Donald Giagnacova, Herbert Goldstein, Marc Katzen, James Nelligan, Barry Rein and Robert Wayne. - Thus far, 38 me r and 29 wom en will attend the Encampment by position, and 12 women and 8 men go by appointment. The re maining three places for women 44 1 ., _,...rf:. Week s Profit By JERRIE MARKOS ek Committee announced a profit of about ! year despite the fact that 7000 less tickets pring's carnival. Wally Caplan, chairman ave his report before the SGA Astembly t although the exact figures had not been calculated, an estimated $lO,OOO had been taken in. Of that sum, he said, $5700 has been spent and an estimated $l7OO will still . be needed to cover costs. A reserve balance of $l5OO must be kept in the fund from year to year, Cap lan said. By a matter of simple arithme tic Caplan deduced that over $2OOO will be added to the schol arship fund into which the prof its from Spring Week are annual ly donated. In his recommendations for next year, Caplan made an ap peal that the duties of Miss Pens State begin to take on rail meaning. He felt she should represent the University as of ten as possible., This year's Miss Penn State, Constance Adler, will have her travelling expenses paid to the ,Laurel Valley Festival this sum mer and will reign over the Homecoming activities next fall since there will be no Homecom ing queen, he added. Another committee sugges tion was that Awards Night be held in Schwab or Recreation Hall instead of the HUB ball room. The seating capacity of the ballroom, Caplan said, left many interested students stand ing in the lobby and outside the HUB. However, a member of the gal lery said he felt that even though the ballroom was overcrowded with 600 people, even 1000'persons would "literally rattle in Rec Hall." The committee also suggested that compensations be given to the chairmen of the Olympics and Float committees since their jobs required as much work as the other chairmen, all of whom have already been compensated. Susan Sherman, SGA secretary, pointed out that appropriations for these compensations have al ready been included in next year's budget. In addition, the committee_ felt that the games category should be dropped from next year's program. This was the first time such an event had been included, and there were only four contestants from which to award three cups. - Two of these groups did not get enough tickets to receive a re fund, because people cannot be moved through this type of event as quickly as the others, Caplan said. will be filled by administration and faculty members. These have not yet been chosen Umpstead said. Assembly could not take ac tion on Jacob Dentu's bill con cerning racial discrimination in State College housing because it found itself without a quorum while the bill was being dis cussed. After the original roll call Ju dith Moore (U-Sr) and Spencer McGraw C-junior class president) were found to be absent with valid excuses already approved by the Rules Committee. Hermann Weber (C-senior class president), Barbara Adey (C-Soph), James Kridel (C-Soph) and Barbara WatchOrn (U-Soph) were absent without previously approved ex cuses. A second roll call - was asked when the parliamentarian; Frank Milus, discovered that• the num- FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA.. - SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 21. 1960 Plane Captured in East Germany WIESBADEN, Germany (IF) East German police reported a U. S. Air Force trans port ;Wade an emergency landing yesterday on Communist soil and they seized seven men and a woman who were aboard. The American Air Force said the plane was unarmed and had streyed• off course. A new round of East-West recriminations seemed likely. It seemed possible that new charges of espionage might be raised against the United States in the wake of the explo sive in spy plane incident. During the day Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in a manifesto to cheering East German Com munists was still exploiting his ;version of the U 2 incident as an (arm of American aggression. And his Foreign Minister An drei A. Gromyko was flying to New York to press spy plane charges against the United States in the United Nations. The twin-engine C 47 trans port disappeared after taking off at midday from Copenhagen, Denmark, for Hamburg on a route close to the Iron Curtain. The U.S. Air Force said nine persons were aboard. Shortly after the Air Force an nouncement of a search for the slow, unarmed plane, The Associ ated Press telephoned East Ger man police. The police said the plane made an emergency landing at the vil lage of Brunshagen, near the West 'German border and Baltic coast anj that the seven men and a woman had been arrested and taken to Grevesmuehlen for ques tioning. It appeared likely that Khru shchev knew of the emergency landing when he spoke to a Communist mass meeting in East Berlin yesterday. I Of the spy plane incident that contributed to the wreck of the Paris summit conference this week before ,it could get started, Khrushchev said Americans seem to think they can fly their planes at will over foreign territory. "They have done this many times and they are doing it at this moment," he said. Speaking after Khrushchev, the 'East German Communist boss, Walter Ulbricht, made what was then a mysterious reference to an "unwanted rendezvous between American officers and our secur ity officials." Collegian to Hold Bicycle Derby Day Watch out, pedestrians! Here they come. Nineteen groups of Uni versity women, both inde pendent and sorority, will mount bikes and head for parking lot 70 at 2 p.m. to day to take part in The-Daily Collegian's Bicycle Derby Day. The site, between old Beaver Field and the Eisenhower Chapel, has been blocked off by Campus Patrolmen and will be transformed into Penn State's version of the Akron Soapbox Speedways. Cars which normally park in the east side of areas 70. 70/k. 708 may be parked in any large area nearby and will not be ticketed. Campus Patrolmen ■aid. Five events, the 8 O'Clock, Deadline, Bluebook, Paper boy and Pinmate races, have been scheduled for the afternoon. They will be run in relays so that each group needs only one bicycle to enter. • Judges for the event are George Donovan, director of associated student activities, Showers, Humidity To Continue Today Uncomfortably warm and hu mid weather is expected today, al though afternoon and evening showers and thunderstorms may bring temporary relief. Temper atures will be somewhat higher than those recorded yesterday with an expected high of 82 de grees. _ Showers will be diminishing to night and temperatures will drop slightly. The overnight low will be near 58 degrees. Mostly cloudy, windy and some what cooler weather is indicated for tomorrow. A high reading of 70 degrees is expected. her had gone below that required to take action. After the second roll call Lynn Marvel (C-Jr), Cynthia Xanthopolous (C-Jr), Howard Creskoff (C-Soph), Richard Pi gossi (C-Soph) and Dean Whar ton (U-rr) were found lo have "disappeared" during the course of the meeting. The appointments of committee members and chairmen, a func tion which ordinarily comes at the end of the agenda, was ac complished by the fortunate vir tue of executive interpretation. Edgar Grubb, acting presiding officer when Donald Clagett step ped down from the position, de cided that the call for approval of appointments taken after dis cussion of Encampment recom mendations implied all the ap pointments on the agenda, not only- those"for Encampment. • rgiatt William Fuller, manager of the Hetzel Union building, and H. L. "Pete" Stuart, president of the Athletic Advisory Board. First, second and third place winners in each race will re ceive trophies. A grand prize trophy will go to the team compiling the most points in all events. The point system is based on the amount of skill needed for each race. The points are as follows: 8 O'Clock and Dead line Races, first place 25, sec ond 20 and third 15; Paperboy and Bluebook Races, first place 20, second 15, and third 10. First place winner in the Pinmate Race will receive 15 points, second 10, and third 5 points. Groups will be limited to one team of four members for each of the events they enter. They may substitute indi vidual team members or entire teams for each event. In the Pinmate Race, however, groups may enter as many coeds as they wish provided the coeds are pinned and their pinmates are present to ride with them. • In case of rain, the Bicycle Derby will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the same place. WRA to Give Awards To Intramural Winners Winners of the spring intramu rals will receive their awards 7 p.m. Monday at the WRA first annual Dessert. PENN STATE ALUM HONORED—William K. Ulerich, publisher of the Clearfield Progress, was presented the Pennsylvania Society of Newspaper Editors' Distinguished Service Award for daily papers last night at the groups' service awards dinner at the Nit tany Lion Inn. Clark R. Mollenhoff, Washington, D.C.lcorrespond ent, was the main speaker at the dinner. Housing Discrimination See Page 4 FIVE CENTS