„ . . . - - -- , • . . : . s• . . *._ . . . . . Weather Forecast: . ' , • • - -..- 0-7 -', . - iSimny, C I . lir . Eittug • ..,*, Tillirg-tart. More Step s ' ' Needed , A Warm ' . , OA- ~ .Str. page 4 ' . VOL N0:62. 118 Miller Appointed! To USG Court By ROCHELLE MICHAELS 'Record's purpose is to promote l l The first of two appointments:g°°d public relations. Bruce Harrison (town area) dis -1 to , the Undergraduate .Student) Government Supreme Court was With Miss Affleck, saying,; , aphroved by the USG Congress It (the editorial) is the truth' r last night. - . !about us—why doesn't it belong Richard Miller, sophomore ini. in our p a p er?' arts and letters from Harrisburg.t NO DECISION was reached was approved by Congress with-;after a half-hour discussion and out discussion after being nainediSimon's report was adopted with-, 1 to the post of USG President Den-'out amendment. Ms Foianini. • ,1 I The following were absent from A sEcoND Foianini appoint-'the meeting: Kent Fuller (town area), Katherine Johnson .(South ment to the court, Fred Good,- Halls), Harry McHenry (town tration from New Holland, sophomore in business atiminis ,waa area), Thomas Paton (fraternity area), Randall Scheib (town area) rejected' by a.' voice vote, because and Allan White (West Halls). he is presently a member of Con gress. Good represents the fra ternity area in Congress John Witmer -(fraternity area) said he did not approve of a mem ber of 'Congress sitting on the Court because "the judicial branch' is' a check on the legislative and, they should be kept separate." Witmer suggested that. Good resign before his appointment was considered further, but Good did not reply to this .suggestion. THE CONGRESS also discussed and approved a report by Kurt Simons, editor of the USG news paper. Simons Said that the first issue of the USG Record; which was distributed. yesterday, had costs only $5O for 3,000 copies. It was previously estimated that it would cost $5O for 2,000 copies. ;. In disdussing the newspaper, Lois Affleck (Pollock) said she thought an editorial on the role of USG which . appeared in the paper was in poor taste since the,i 2 A.M. Permissions 'All' coeds will have 2 a.m.' permissions tomorrow night; Coeds will have regular 1 a.m. permissions i tonight. : • CaMean Maas by Dave Zimmerman . . Top HOPES JUMP HIGH as cheerleading Bottom A CHILDREN'S LITERATURE class practice begins on the lawn of Old Main. From on Ag Hill escapes from the warm buildings to this i group the finalists will be chosen who will the breezy lawns as the afternoon's tempera .go on , to compete for the freshman positions. tures soar. i . . Voter Percentage" Nears Goal As 1,450 Cast USG Ballots By WINNIE BOYLE As 1.450 additional students went to the polls yesterday, the Elections Commission moved nearer I its goal of a 40 per cent turnout of eligible voters in the Undergraduate Student Govern ment elections. When polls closed ,last night, 25.7 per cent of the 'eligible student body had voted. . ALLEN FEINGOLD. elections! Commission -c h air ma n, said Wednesday that 1,927 students had voted the first day of elections. Last night he said that he had later discovered four additional sheets of voters' signatures and ballot numbers. This discovery raised the first day's total to 2,057. The 3,507 students who have thus far cast their ballots represent ap proximately 25 per cent of po tential voting student body. Commenting on the floating polls which circulated last night FOR A SETTER PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 27. 1962 U.S., U.K. Orbit Satellite CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (k)—The United States and the United Kingdom ' teamed together , launched a scientific satellite. This feat, coupled with a joint U.S.-Japariese rocket launching at Wallops Island, Va., signaled a new era in international space co-' operation. • The two. firings came amid these other developments: *America's spacecraft Ranger 4 crashedlanded on the far side of the moon' .after a 64-hour. 1231,486, mile journey ' through I space. •The Soviet Union announced through the town area, Feingoldicessful, he added, if there werel said: "I think that tonight a new , more loudspeakers, more cars and' idea was inaugurated and it came more lighting on the cars. off smoothly."He said he expects a heavy This is the first time an Elec: l day of voting today since it is tions Commission has taken polls full day of classes. Students will to the, voters through_ a floating'realize it is their last chance ;to poll system. ; • lhave a voice in determining their He said the new method was ;student government leaders for successful enough to continue nextithe remainder of this year and year, but he added that he thought next year, he added. ,elections could be condensed into, • la two-day period rather than the l H ot w present three days of ;voting. Weather THE FIRST DAY, he said. there f be a rally to vote on cam ! pus, while •on the second there; could be a rally off-campus. He said he felt just as many students would vote if this type of election' procedure were adopted. The floating polls weit• success- Jul, but they were a "limited, ,success." Feingold said. They: ;would have been even more sue-' the launching of their fourth Sputnik in six weeks. The new earth satellite, Cosmos 4, waa de scribed by the Russians as packed with instruments to measure radiation and other space-probing gear. •The U.S. Air Force fired two mystery satellites a few hours apart from Point Arguello, Calif. The first employed a Blile Scout I:poster combination. These hale been used for high-altitude re search. THE SECOND had an Atlas- Agena B booster, - such as have been used for the Samos military reconnaissance - satellite series and for the Midas missile alarm satel lite series. Other detaili were kept secret. By JOEL MYERS , falling slowly through the eve- The mercury came within three . . fling hours, but it will probably degrees ,of April's all-time h i.remain above 67 degrees :until temperature record yesterday a f t - . midnight. , • ernoon, when the temperature, Clear skies were also observed touched 87 degrees at the Ifni-' at last ye'ar's carnival : hut; tem versity weather station. .peratures were near record- min- Bright sunshine and unreason- imas for the season instead of record maximal ably warm weather is expected . , again today and the Univeisity GUSTY NORTHWESTERLY thermometer may approach 90 winds and temperatures in the degrees, which is the highest-April. upper 30's forced most carnival . •temperature ever recorded in the' patrons to wear jackets and'over- State C r oljege area. ,' coats: . 4 NEARLY PERFECT weather is Since the weather pattern peross forecas! (or tomorrow :evening's the United States has become Jlearly stagnant. little day -In ( I ;6' carnival. Skies should he mestlY clear and . temperatures will ir change is expected until Mimday pleasantly warm. , or Tuesday. ' After reaching the• upper i 80's: An increasing southwesterly under partly cloudy skies tumor- flow of jiroist air should carne the row afternoon, the mercury is exHhumidity to begin increasing to-, pected to fall slowly. At sunset morrow, a slow increase in the, temperature is expected to be;rloudiness is firreotett to , begin near 75 degrees. It should continues tomorrow afternoon Contenders for 'Miss Penn State,' He-Man, Queen of Hearts Named Barbara Isaacson, Linda Krum-Deborah Salzburg were named as bnldt, Billie Dee Mcllroy, Carole finalists of the Queen of Heart, Wagner and Allison Woodall were Contest, last night. chosen as the finalists for the; Eugene Butkus. William Caul ,Miss Penn State contest late antis. Bud Williams, Morton Cross Wednesday night. and Charles Ililbish were named i THE FIVE finalists will attend the finalists for the He-M m con a banquet next Tuesday at the test also held last night. Nittany Lion Inn where they wilt. THE SPRING WEEK partner% !meet the contest judges, Carol - of the finalists of the Queen of •Connelly. chairman of the con-I,llearts content and the iG•=Man ;test, said. ' contest are eligible to compete in 1 The finalists will also be inter- the finals scheduler! for 2 p.m 'viewed by Laurence- H. Lattrnan, Sunday on the 'Jetzt U nion lawn. ,emcee at at Tuesday's Awards Night.. The partners are: M 154 Gerber Alpha Theta /Y _ and Rob at 8 p.m. in Recreation Hall. The Kappa ertCole of Delta C hi: Mis s Stoltz, 'by Mrs. Eric A. Walker. ' queen will be crowned that night AlphaOmicronpi, and William 1 • Semmel, Delta Chi; Miss Sauer, Miss Isaacson was s'pansorty.l bv ; rm .-. Delta Delta Delta and Edward !Phi Sigma Sigma and - Sigma ‘-'"; Lewis, Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Miss Miss Krumboldt by Kappa 1 Alpha Ewan, Simmons Hall and DaVid !Theta and Phi Gamma Delta; Miirs .mai .,... ,•._ ma pa Si g ma' and Miss !Mcllroy by Delta Gamma and Phi. ",..1; 11 _ _. rg gelta•Phi Epsilon. and 'Kappa Psi: Miss Woodall by Chi "' Howard Hughes, Theta Xi: : Omega and Beta Theta Pi; and, Jenaud Schwartz, Phi Mu and ,Miss Wagner by Pi Beta Phi and Rinku.,, Kappa Delta Rho; Jane )Phi Delta Theta. • I i : Hoffman, Delta Gamma. and The contestants were judged on Ctiulauris, Phi Kappa Psi; Margie activities and scholarshi plus. Weltener. Ewing, and Williarns r :the interview conducted S ednes -. Alpha Zeta; Rochelle Saikolnky, day night. • - Sigma Delta Tau, and Cross, P In other Spring Week activitie4 . Epsilon. Ps: and Carol Mowers. Thea Gerber, Sarah , Shultit Atherton Hall West, and liilbish, Marilyn Sauer, Rosalyn Evan and Town Independent Men. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, visiting in the United States, is expected to announce a name for the British-US. satel lite launched from Cape Canaver al Meanwhile, it was known b,i its program ,number, Ssl. British newsmen dubbed' it UKI, for United Kingdom. The gold-plated satellite was boasted into orbit by a Thor-Delta rocket—the most reliable U.S. booster—which scored its eighth .satellite-launching success in a row. • Jubilant officials of both coun tries announced the 1321,qund payload was in orbit when a tracking team at Cape Canaveral picked up signals from it after it completed one two-hour - whirl around the world.. The 23-inch cylinder, bristling with solar cell panels, experiment booms and antenna, was. sent alolt to explore the ionosphere and cosmic radiation. THE ANGLO-AMERICAN ef fort may speed the time when the two great powers-- the United States .and the Soviet Union— combine their talents for manned and unmanned exploration of the universe. President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev have exchanged TTIC3- sages on the subject since - the successful orbital flight of Ameri can astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. in February: to Continue FIVE CENTS