Weather Forecast: 0 .. : t Parade , A 4. • i ' - • ' - 4 f let Floa t Sonny, • 1 Ilto ill aug -7,o4,:(tuttargtztit ISSUIL Warmer l zr ... - —see page 4 VOL. 62. N Paihel Supports Filotit Parade At' Homecoming The Panhellenic Council voted 18 to 4 last night to support holding, float parade: on Homecoming Weekend. . The council also passed an amendment - to the motion stating that Panhel ask the Interfraternity Council-to call a special meeting and invite sororities to discuss a Homecoming float parade. . At . its final meeting of unanimously voted not to hay :Homecoming activities. IFC voted 39 to 8 to hold a float parade _ on Friday night of Spring Week .and "the IFC-Panhel Music Festival on! •the l following . Saturday night. ROBERT POLISHOOK. Home comi g- Weekend and float parade cheitnan, speaking later in the Panliel meeting, said that he had intended to appear,at the IFC and speak in favor of a Homecoming float parade but -was told byla' member of the IFC executive committee that the meeting; was for fraternity repre sentatives only. Emil Sos, IFC president, said last night that he told Polishook that -there was -a possibility that the meeting would be closed. He said. that Polishook said he di. not. plan to attend anyway. s . -Polishook said that he would appear at the Undergraduate Stu-, dent,Governm.ent meeting tomor row night and; give a report on the.possibiltiiei of having a Honie coming float parade. He said that he would try to have all the facts and plans listed irithe Collegian as• soon as possible if USG were to recommend a float parade. In other business, , the Council passed a motion ' recommending that next year's Greek Week be scheduled for February 22 to 29. Greek Week has tentatively been planned - lot' Oct. 21 to 27, but the Council representatives expressed Opinions that there would not be enough time to prepare for the sing if the Homecoming float pa rade were held the previous -week end. IFC.[HOWEVER supports hold ing Greek Week in October and neithe the IFC nor the Panhel Greek Week chairmen have the power to compromise without the vote of their groups. Both' groups have held their final meeting of the term. • - Jean Kennedy, Panhel second : • . : - • • —C•nesisa Photo 107 01111 G•odamall THREE CAR ACCIDENT: A campus patrolman trol after she made a right turn Intl the area questions witnesses to yesterday's accident in from Park Avenue. The- car ran i over two `- Parking Area• 70, behind home plate at the wooden driveway posts, and slammed into two baseball field. A coed's car veered out of con- parked can, ' . By PEGGY RUSH he term- Monday night, IFC • a float parade as part of the vice-president ind Greek Week chairman, said that if a joint Panhel-IFC meeting were to be called; Greek Week would be the maintopic of discussion. Also in other business, the' Council accepted a code for the formal 1962-83 sorority rush. Un- 1 I der the code, sorority open houses will begin Sunday, Nov. 11. A period of limited contact will) then be in effect until formal rush registration „Jan. 3. Ribboning is! ! scheduled for 7 p.m. Jan. 14. Open houses are scheduled for Nov. 11, 17 and 18. The first round of chatter dates will take place iJan. 5 and 6 and second round on I Jan. 8 and 9. Bermuda junctions will be held Jan. Il and coffee hours and the signing of prefer entials will take place Jan. 13. The town housing list, now Flinchbaugh. chairman of the maintained by the Undergraduate housing committee. Student Government, will not be Another consideration, he said, - turned back to the dean of men's is to conduct periodic spot chucks office "unless every possible of - `or rooms appearing on the hous fort by us is exhausted." Dean ing `list to make sole they are Wharton, USG president, said last 'still for rent. night. . I In other USG affairs Patricia Until last year the dean of men's Fineran, freshman in liberal arts !office had taken care of the list from Bryn Mawr, was appointed • , Warmer More Humid - Weather i WHARTON SAID if no one else editor of the USG Record Her Pi found to handle the job during appointment was announced by ithe summer months, the USG sec. Hai no' Grace, chairman of the USG Due to Return ' to - Area Today Iretariat will do it. ,Public Relations Cenimittee . "A lot of trouble arise.s because GRACE ALSO announced that Rising temperatures and in-,thunderstorms into the state late many of those who list their avail-.application blanks for the Public creasing humidities are expectedctonight, and showers are forecast able rooms fail to notify the hous- Relations Committee are available to bring a return of uncomfortable'for tomorrow as the *rant moyes'ing committee after the room g• at the lletzel Union desk. He said weather to this area today. The through the Commonsrealth. Vented," Wharton said.- there will be no deadlino for the' mercury is - forecast to reach 881 Cooler air should follow the As a result of this, students in- applications and that he will con degrees under sunny skies thiscure about •rooms advertised on tact interested persons ax soon as afternoon. cold front's passage, and pleasant l % It e list, find them already rented he receives their applications weather is indicated for Friday Nand to date think the list is not up to The mass of relatively •cool, dry air that broke a record-setting Hot and humid air continued lFC Fines Fraternity seven day heat wave when it . nroduce uncomfortable weather i An ' enlargement of the housing a the southeastern states yesterday.t Alpha Phi Alpha ftaternity was overspread the state Monday con - t committee's operations is neces- Afternoo readingswere mostly to fully justify USG's re- L_ fi v ned $25 for improper door duty tmued to provide pleasant weather Afternoon the 91r n s and some areas reached 3arY sponsibilsty in this area, he said .'by the • Interfraternity Council yesterday. [the 100 degree mark. I Board of Control Thursday night, By this Wharton said he meant The abnormally hot and humid Thomas Dc Rocco, boaid chairman, The local forecast indicates to - such new innovations as weekly tropical air, which was displaced night should be mostly' cloudy and mimeographed copies of the hous- gaid southward by the invasion of the The fraternity had failed to mild with a chance of a shower ing list which would be made cool air, should begin returning Put a sign on the front door say toThe low temperature will be near, available at the Hetzel Union Pennsylvania today. However, 58 degrees. desk and to incoming students up- ing that the patty -was closed, no new heat wave is expected.i Deßoc c•o said 1 Showers, cloudy skies and mild on request An eastward-moving cold front:temperatures are indicated for to-, Wharton said he has already Thu money will now go into 1..1 expected to spread showers andimorrow. A high of 74 is expected. 'made this suggestion to Suzanne the WC treasury, he added-. ' FOR A .BETTER PENN STAT! UNIVERSITY PARK, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING. MAY 23. 1962 Fiery Crash Ends Secret Navy Flight EBERSBURG; Germany (W}—,ing ho;;l, and then, "There was a Munich quickly brought the blaze A four-engine U.S. Navy plane . :terrible explosion and flames shot under control. broke apart in flight yesterday pu . 1 i ,The Constellation—flying out of Frankfurt but regularly based at - IT, ROLLED ovet.several times. and crashed in flames near this!, south Bavarian town, killing the air and then fell several Rota , Spain—had radioed an „,,•in . °`” hundred yards fromour• village.' emergency signal and apparently ,28 aboard. said Mathias Wolf, a Community was trying for a landing at Mu- Officiali said at first the WV2IHaII worker at the hamlet °filial. • I Lockheed Constellation whichlMarkt Schwaben. I U.S. Navy, Army and Au Force 'apparently exploded in! the cloud-! "There was an explosion as ifispokesmen in Europe called the less sky was on a secret mis-;an .ato m i c bomb had been: flight a routine navigational train, sion. , • ;dropped," Wolf said. He estimated ing T i n ission. the plane had come down from' A spokesman for U.S. Atlantic;,, „„„ fee t . • . • U.S. ARMY officers took - Oyer Fleet Air Force headquarters athvw ,the investigation until' Navy ex=' Heat from the flumes'— which Norfolk, Va., later said , the classi-Ifees could fly in from Spain and :could be . seen for miles around Maly, mission report had resulted taly. and 185 American soldiers ;the Bavarian countryside —drove from what he called a misunder-were assigned to patrol the area. standing. ; ~ ;back farmers who ran,tii help any iwho might have survived. , Names were withheld: pending OFFICIALS said that the Navy! Fourteen fire engines from notification of their next of kin. Department in Washington con-,-- usG ----------- ---.--- - - ---- -- ----- - .. — 'firmed 26 persons had been on the plane although., the flight, to Continue' Work manifesto indicated 17 had been, aboard_ . 1 The plane carried 22 Navy of-, firers and men and four Arniy, - • • • • personnel. All bodies . were IT Town H ousing L ists covere • The plane crashed in a grass , field 10 miles east of Munich Air-i port. The tail and other parts, were strewn along a path several: miles long leading -10 the crash! site. , :I iA fish hatchery worker said. the plane had plummeted toward• earth with a shrill and frighten-, Coed's Car Veers Into Parked Autos An automobile operated by a driving toward College Avenue coed went out of control and hit on South Atherton Street slammed two parked cars at 4 . 15 p.m. yes- into an auto stripped for a red . terday. The coed was making a light, State College police 'said right turn into parking area 70, yesterday, behind home plate on the baseball . Jane Ifoffrrizin. freshman in lih-• field, the Campus Patrol said last Prat arts from "State College,,was night. driving the car that hit the rear Jeanne Bathurst, junior in phys ical education from Stale College, had pv,t completed the turn into the parking area from-Park Ave. whim her car veered toward the left and hit the first of the two _ cars, patrolmen said. This car then:- Damage was estimated by police banged into the second vehicle, to be $225 and there were no in- The car driven by Miss Rathurstjuries. -- a1 , ,0 ran over two wooden drive- ANOTHER INCIDENT involv way posts. ing an auto belonging to a student THE FIRST vehicle was owned by Edwin R. Sebastianelli Of: Montrose and the second by James J. Tarman, director of sports in formation for the Department of Public Information. The patrol said that them was damage to all of the cars, but the most extensive damage was done to the' Bathurst car. No in juries resulted._ from the incident. In another accident at 4:50 p.m. on Monday afternoon, a student or the one stopped at tho• bgbt, , which was nperhted by fleorge .Gurrirno also from State College, ,Police said. The rea:4on Miss Hoff irnan couldn't stop was that her brake.‘ faded, they added. occurred at about 2:30 yesterday - morning: A 1954 sedan owned by Has Modarrest. graduate stu dent in geology from State Col lege, was stolen from the (lower ,sity parking lot in front of Rec reation Hall, state police said yes ,terday: The police apprehended two ,juveniles from State College In :the car at 8:30 a.m.' yesterday in Martha's Furnace. They found no 'damage to the car: FIVE CENTS