•stesl (3Jb? iaiblllQlbUpnttut Warm , \ | mjf | -sob page 4 a. No. 98 ivding Pdfs Planned Spade Town Voti^ April USG Elections Tr To ig stations located in trav automobiles will be used mentally during* 4he USG entiali elections . scheduled iril 25, 26 and 27, Elections i isaion [ Chairman Allen Fein announced yesterday. said ! three cars will be >ed to' handle, the voting on night of the elections. The rill operate on S. Gamer and gh streets and/ Locust Lane 7 until 9 pjm.' They will yr a minimum of 15 minutes major cross streets. j fhia should serve to stimulate voting among fraternity, and toWii independent men, Feingold said TF|THE TOHMOUT.on Wednes day night is good, the. experiment willi continue Thursday and Fri . day,”! he said. “On the basis of the results jot this trial, I will or will not recommend this system to the Congress for future elec tions;” ■ I - , - Other polling stations will be operated in all dining halls, on the ground floor of the .Hetzel 'Union Building, at the c Mall on FoUqck Rd. and in front ,of the HUB on Bollock Rd These sta tions will be open from 9 aan. until 6:30 pan. each day. j Feingold I said the dispersion of 1 il AI revised list of available bousing in the State College area is being compiled by the local Chamber of Commerce. An increased number of recent requests jfrom prospective resi der \ led to tbe establishment of housinr list, Poll elling He equip] each cars \ bomber of Commerce Lists col Housing Accommodatio CtflwKn Phafai hr J«ka Bwas* _—- Y SCIENCE CLUB QUEbH- Connie Robison. la 10-year* «d jMjsbomere Inborn* economicsfrom~Co*l Center, ni named 91MB ol the dairy science dob last sight She will sow represent 4* jtJatvarstty la the annual stele “Mis* Milkmaid- contest hi - Jws. .Her 'first job, however, will be to reign over the Bah? - Expeeilion on campus May it A sister of the .1959 stele qtuen ijv**foot» five-and-one-half-incb Connie said she would! like nothing better than to follow la her sister's, footsteps. Tbs only qualification of the contest was that fit# conies tents roost live on fcsme on which tailk fa produced commercially, fthsnfltj bar file trojdxy after heir selection fa George E. Shook, Junior is dairy . ' weiaee from Clarion, president Off, the chib. UNIVERSr the polling, places will necessitate an Elections Commission of about 150 persons. „j, i j A MANDATORY meeting for; all commission members Will be held at 0:45 Sunday in 214 Boucke.i Applications for persons "Wishing! to become commission members are available at the HUBi desk, he said. Interviews will be held next] Tuesday and Thursday, Feingold! continued, for persons who sub-j rait an application. \ j Members of the, commission will attend the party meeting pet for] Sunday night to register! parly: members. ■ j J Campus party will meet; in 119 j Osmond Lab, liberal party: in 121! Sparks, and University party ini 10. Sparks. All three meetings are' scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Sunday. m ADDITION to registration, University party will elect a chair- 1 man to fill the post which -Elliot Newman resigned yesterday. Campus party plans to explain its aims to prospective members at its meeting. | All parties will hold primary: nominations for USG posts at stake in the election April 8. Final nominations will be held, and 'campaigningbegin, April 16, president of the chamber, said Wednesday. The list {will be maintained fori rooming houses which have sin gle, double and multiple units < available. Students wishing to use the vice mit the Chamber of FOR A SETTER PENN STATS PARK. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. MARCH 30. 1962 Argentine Military Replaces Frondizi --rg<. jv~- - , Frondiri teas seized and re moved from his position yes terday as the culmination, iiut one step short o/ comp'efe military rule, of a series of events which began March 18 when several supporters of deposed dictator Juan D, Per<jn to cm, surprise election victories. Military leaders first insisted that ‘ Frondiri resign. When he refused,, troops seized the Ar gentine equivalent of the While House as toell as other Buenos Aires buildings and radio and TV stations. P | Allen St, Harries said. ' f? There has been a steady of requests, from students ii past week, Harries said. Property owners who like their names placed, o list should call the chambe fice, AD 7-7644, and give the of facility, rental price, loc and the date the housing w. available, Harries said. ! * The chamber, which die maintain a housing list last :established 'the' list becau: requests from landlords and [expressed interest in such shown in a housing su£ve] year, he said. About 580 homeowners questioned in the survey a per cent said they were in of the chamber keeping s list, he said. The Undergraduate Stuj [Government maintains a similar homing list near the cardroom on the ground floor of the tietzel Union Building. Property owners who would like their housing; facilities listed on this may call' the USG Office from 7 to 0 p.m.i weekdays. | Fall Term Registration Forms Must Be Submitted by June 20: Students planning to eriroll at should use- the fall tern* 1962: the University for the fall term ’Timetable of Classes" which is 1982 are required to file ian of- now available at the Hetzel Union' flcial registration form Humber desk. I 2 Card before the end of the spring ; - . . , . . ! term, Robert G > Bernreuter, reg- J OT / aU #J* rn » 7 ay ! istraf, announced. 7 Registration This will enable the ctonttnu- ur '?L ance of some of the advantages . at. early registration he slid, be- jL??' cause the registrar will be able to provide department heaps with , SUIT>TT if T ,I*™. J? J} 1 * th . ei * advance information concerning Number 2Cards during class sizes for the fall term 1962 summer registration period. ; Students planning to register ! If a student has not submit for the . fall term 1862 are in- ted his fall term Number 2 Card structe<x to meet with lijeir ad- before the deadline (June 20, visers, according to the sched- 1962), bis class assignments will ules announced by their colleges, be based on the remaining avail to complete a Official Registration able space at Fall Term registrs- Fcrm (Number 2 card). Students tion. ■ BUENOS AIRES (/ P) With the military’s blessing, Jose Maria Guido took office as Argentina’s president yes terday, replacing his banished friend Arturo Frondizi. Guido, who has been presi line for the job under the cor take over. The military leaden who busted Frondizi finally per suaded Guido to take the presi dency. FRONDIZI. who embraced his tearful wife and peacefully sur rendered to arrest, was flown to imprisonment on a navy island in the River Plate not far from Buenos Aires as the military lead ers finally carried out their long threatened coup. j Guido was sworn in before the Supreme Court. The 5-foot-4, 51-year-old law yer, an associate of Frondizi and a member of his Intransigent Rad ical party, finally agreed to front for the military bosses nine hours after the president had been whisked away. GUIDO often has acted as temporary president while Fron dizi was away on foreign trips. The military rulers thus open the way to solve their, No. I prob lem If ft by the ouster of Frondizi —the formation of a constitutional government that would avoid out right military rule. But their second big problem— how to deal with the 2.8-million voters who still cling to ex-dicta tor; Juan D. Pcron who dogged the-days of Frondizi throughout his four years of rule-remained. BEHIND THE PEBONIST peril lies: the grave economic sickness] inherited from a decade of Peron- Seniors Vole to Donate Class Gift To Revolving Student Loan Fund ould the • of type stlon U be 'Hie senior class of 1962 voted, 1960 received $2 and the class of by a ratio of about three to one, 1981 $1 from the University for to [donate its class gift money each $1 collected from class mem* to a revolving student loan fund, bers. Cla ” prcsi ‘ A TOTAL OF *» seniors voted dent, said yesterday. a t registration. The revolving A not year. i e of i their s list )' last "THE SUM OF ABOUT I4JS6 wiQ be given to the student aid office,” Grubbs said. 'The money will probably be broken down into 10 or 15 loans and will’ be given -under the name of the ’Re volving Loan Fund of the Class of 1962.’" 1 rid 66 favor >ich a A faculty committee will decide the recipients of the loan, he said. Consideration will be •, given to’ those students already on scholarship but still in need of additional funds, and those stu dents nearest graduation, he added. A minimum AllAJniversity avefage of 2.00 is also-ieuuired. The class of ’62 is-the first to collect all the money entirely from the class members. The class of ident of the senate, was first Jn istitution but was reluctant to ist dictatorship which Frondizi’s austerity policies fell short of curing. The reaction to the coup by the believers in Peronism—backed by. some 100.00 underground Commu nists and Castroites—could be vio lent. So could be the effect on Argentina’s angry students who fear another military dictatorship which may try to control their' thinking. In a long communique explain ing their action, military lend ers' declared they were shelving Frondizi because he lacked the moral and political fiber to unite the nation again and lead it against the great social disturb ances threatened by resurgent Peronlsts. . FRONDIZI was arrested by a naval officer at his suburban resi dence in the early morning as a crowd outside sang the national anthem. He was rushed to an air port in a five-car caravan and put on' an air force plane for the 30- mile hop to Martin Garcur Island. There he was imprisoned in one of the comfortable houses of a naval officer. U S. Embussy spokesmen said Frondizi’s fall automatically sus pended diplomatic relations- be cause “there is no constituted gov ernment with whom we can hava official relations.-”-. ' loan fund received 636 votes, the rare book collection for the Pattee Library 221, the Inter religious book fund for the Eisen hower Chapel library 59'-and miscellaneous 22. Other proposal* that had been considered by the senior clasa'ad- visory, board, but did not appear on the ballot at registration were building a studept hostel in Greece or Chile, a medical ward in India and financing experi mental research which would en able WDFM to broadcast over AM as well as FM. Seniors to Conduct Summer Research Fourteen outstanding seqior* will have an opportunity to do scientific research work this sum- for 10 weeks with faculty members in the areas of physics, |ceramic technology and metal lurgy under a program sponsored i.by the National Science Founda tion. Seven summer. and .five aca demic year participants will do [research in the.'Department, of Physics, under the direction of Walter Goldberg,! assistant pro fessor of physics, who is in charge of the program. One student will participate in the research program in the De partment of Ceramic Technology under the supervision of Dr. Wil liam O. Williamson, associate pro fessor of ceramic technology. Dr. Harold J. Read, professor of physical metallurgy, will ,bo In .charge of six student* who will work in the metallurgy do- Ipartment FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers