SATURDAY, I APRIL 29, 1967 , Spri k— ng Wee Proteeds Pinar - : USG Sclidlarship- • I • In addition to providing students with entertainment, the Spring Week activities al4o provide money for tile Undergraduate StudentH Govetinment scholarship fund. Students fail to- realize this funiction of Spring Week, ac cording- to Spring Week Chairman Dick Lippin. The profits from Spring Weik are added to a principill which has been invested by tiie Board_ Of Trustees. The amount available for scholarships each year comes froin the intere=t which has develqp6d from the invested' prin cipal along with traffic fines froln that year. Application Requirements Applicants must be needy, ftill-time students, who hav an all-University average of at least 2.50. "Students who have made important contribution through their campus activities! will be considered fore most among the applicants," according to Ralph N. Krecke i director of student aid. In this Ty, Krecker said, student who have made an attempt to improve the campus life wil receive recognition. A committee composed of the Dean of Men, the Dez I L I Of Women, the president and vice president of USG, , a;1 1 . -the director of student aid screen the applicants and inalJ the awards. 1 In addition to the scholarships, a loan fund has als. been provided. The loans provide emergency assistance students who are in immediate need of money. UpperclaSs men are considered first for these loans, Krecker said. 11 Students interested in USG scholarships who 11,a1.: already applied for regular Unitiersity scholarships shm4l l . inform the office of Student Aid that they wish to h: considered. ; Interested students 'who have not completed applica tions are urged to do so immediately. Forms are availatil l ; in the Office of Student `Aid, Nitlany 32. In addition, a pa ants confidential statement must be completed and sen t to the College Scholarship Servire, Princeton, New Jersey Jones Appointed Resident Eecutive By Businer C J. V. Jones. vice president, and general manager id charge of building, industry, and de fense products operations of the Armstrong Cork Co., I Lan caster. will serve -as business executive residence at the Uni versity's College of Business Administration during the Spring Term. He is the second business ex ecutive to occupy this position. Jones will teach an advanced policy seminar in adminiStra tion for graduate students in collaboration with Max D. Richards, professor and head of the department of manage ment. He will also teach under graduate courses in public rela.: Lions and administrative strat egy. Student groups will have an opportunity to discuss manage ment topics with him, and fac ulty members from the de partments of marketing, man agement, and accounting will have opportunities.. to discuss current business problems fac ing top management. Overall Coordination The policy seminar focuses on problems of overall coordi nation of.operations in the firm and analysis of strategies for the most effective achievement of corporate goals. Jones' company has made available financial, organiza tional, planning, and control data to serve as the' basis for lectures' and 'discussion. These materials will be analyzed in the classroom to provide stu dents with insights into' the practical problems and meth ods of coordinating the parts of the busines as a whole. Jones joined the Armstrong Cork Company in 1936 follow ing his graduation from the University of Chicago. He ,was based in the Chicago District until 1940, when he became manager of the Acoustical De partment of the Company's home office in Lancaster. After serving successively as manage. of the Lumber Dealer Products Departmerit and sales manager of the Building Pro ducts Division' he became vice president and Operations Gen eral Manager in 1963. He ;was elected a director 'of the com- „ . "NEW COLLEGE DINER Downtown Between the Movies . . _ ALWAYS OPEN, . . , . SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITIES IN THESE AREAS •STATE COLLEGE 'BLOOMSBURG •HANOVER TOP HOURLY RATES + OVERTIME 4- 2 DAYS] OFF PER WEEK Those interested are invited Ito talk with company representative and a representative from the State Employment Service in Room #216, Hetzel Union Building from 9:00 a.m. until; 5:00 p.m. on May 2nd and 3rd. For Information .Call ToM Owens-364-1482 . (1:00-5:00 p.m.) HANOVER CANNING CO. Equal OppOrtunitY Employer Loan Fund J. V. JONES pany in 1966. .i native of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Jones became a citl t izen of the United States at an early age when his parents moved to Cleveland, O. ;The Business Executive in Residence program was initi ated in the Fall Tenn 1966 to give outstanding business firms and their leaders an oppor tunity to contribute their talent and experience to education for business leadership and to give students an opportunity for per sdnal contact and dialogue with piactical business leaders. The program. according to Ossian R. MacKenzie. dean of the College of Business Admin istration.. not only . enriches the educational experience of stu dents but also will ultimately benefit business. The University program has been dexeloped with the aid of the Visiting Council of the College of Business Administra tion, a group of management leaders who have been serving as advisers on the future de velopment of th e College. James H. Binns, senior vice pitesident of the Armstrong Cork Company, is a member of the Council. - AUTO ARTS • ACCESSORIES Western Auto f . 112 S. FRASER ST. Syniposium at the University's College of Human DevelOpment (last week, - and Dr. Wil liam J. McHale, Symposhim chairman, discuss art work in the faculty exhibit in the Hiiman DeireloPment 'Building Living Center. The exhibit will remain open for an other Week. Long Promises Fight Against Dodd Censure WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Russell B. Long pledged Friday to light censure of Sen. Thomas J. Dodd. He said half of the Senate ethics committee mem bers couldn't stand the investi gation the Connecticut Senator went through. The ethics committee com posed of three Democrats and three Republicans unanimously recommended Thursday t hat Dodd be censured for diverting at least 5116,083 in political funds to his personal use and for double billing for travel expenseg. The committee's proposed resolution .of censure says that Dodd's conduct "is contrary to accepted morals, dero gates from the public. trust expected of a senator, and tends to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute." - Long: No Censure But Long.•the assistant Dem ocratic leader in the Senate told a reporter that as far as he is concerned Dodd "has done nothing to deserve censure." Long said he will "vote and fight" against censuring Dodd who asserted that he has done ndthing wrong and that his Puttee To Exhibit Examples from the micro- mat, which can be easily re- also! represent a saving of time form collection of the Pattee produced in the library in page- and effort for the user. Library at the University have size, eye visible copies by tfsing With a little instruction, li been placed on exhibit in the a reader-printer. ' ! brar'v patrons find microfilm stair hall on the second floor A microfilm collection is es- materials easy to use. Micrd of the library to help students sential to a research library, film) readers are located ad: and faculty become better ac- not only for unique items tin-- jacent to storage facilities in quainted with one of the major available in any other format, the Micro_ ,rm collections, as research tools at their disposal , but as a means of ;combating well as a collection of guides in Pattee. .- -- the tremendous storage prOb- and indexes supplemental to -, The scope and depth of the lems facing libraries: A doien the genefal reference collec collection can only be suggest drawers of microfilm can hOld lion. ed in the exhibit, for in,-addi- Re lion to technical, scientific and the equivalent of 20.000 or more ava i thesis materials available only volumes on stack shelves. They need in microformat, the librar. me libraries maintain their ,d ntire collection of newspapers on microfilm, discarding paper issues as soon as the film is received. The collection also contains micro-reproductions of enor mous collections or rare and out-of-print book materials rep resented in such bibliographies as Charles Evans Bibliography of American Imprints and the Short Title Catalogs of Wing, Pollard and Redgrave. The libraries are also making important acquisitions in the area of micro-reproduction of important manuscript collec tions, .s..lch as the Presidential Papers at the Library_ of Con gress and the Papers of the Adams Family. Much of this materials is available in no other format. Film sheet transparencies in several sizes (known as micro fiche) are also part of the col lection. The library prefers to acquire transparent microfor- _ • CAMP TRAIL'S END Beach Lake, Pennsylvania A large coeducational summer camp Still has openings for: A: rifle instructor and an agricultural counselor Applications for these positions through the office of Student Aid 32 . Nittany Rm. 1 • 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 SADLY ENOUGH This Makes You Our Sole Source Of Income Please stop in soon! HORNER'S BOOK' OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9:00 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000bo THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA . 1 i s Committee ResOlution THOMAS J. DODD conscience is clear. Sen. John Stennis, .11Mass., is chairmvn of the ethicS commit tee. The vice chairman is Sen -Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah The other members are Sens Gre!lc Militarists 'Parade Top Prisoners foi. Newsmen I __l ATHENS (AP) With I a minister, Paul Economou Gour show of confidence in the iron as. grip it imposed .on Greece a Ilia United States and Britain week ago, the military regime traditional allies and helpers of paraded its top political psis- Gr4ce, were not required to. oners before 'newsmen yestfr- recdgnize the new regime in day. Outside' ambassadors are officially ac militarist government. 1 cre ited to 26-year-old King A reliable diplomatic source Con tantine II and not to any in Athens, said the United States spe ific government.' and British governments have ~...,, indicated at least-acceptancoA the militarists who have em braced young,King Constantine as their ally. • The source noted that both British and the United States have officially acknowledged appointment of a new foreign Our Business Is Not Subsidized By The CIA 202 S. Allen Street The face of; Coppolino's at- A. S. Mike Monroney, D-Okla., tractive new wife, Mary, turned Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., ashen as the verdict l was read John Serman Cooper, R-Ky., by the court clerk. Dressed in a and James B. Pearson, R-Kan. • cool white dress, Mary sat si- First Defender lently in a front row seat just Long, a formidable opponent beyond the bar from her hus in Senate debate, is the first band. . senator to speak out in Dodd's For Mary's money, the state defense and also the first to charged, Coppolino hatched the - theethics gainsay committee. , plot to kill his first wife with,a_ Long's remarks. Stennis declined comment on , drug that was thought to be un detectable after death. The Long currently is engaged in drug never before had beenidied as the agent in a a hot, close Senate fight to homicide case. prevent repeal of the law he The verdict climaxed the sponsoredlast year to provide dapper Coppolino's sec o n d for financing presidential elec- courtroom battle for`- his life tion campaigns with tax funds. in five D ec. He was acquit- On every vote so far;Dodd ted last December in New has been in Long's corner. Jersey on a charge that 116 suf- Another crucial vote is set for • Tuesday. The Senate is not expected to take, up the resolution to cen- sure Dodd until the week after Majority Leader Mike Mans field, D-Mont., said that is his best guess - now but that before fixing a date he wants to con- suit 'with Sen. Everett M. Dirk- s'en Of Illinois. the Republican leader who is in a hospital with infectiOns pneumonia Microfilm l i ference personnel ar e !able to assist in locating Led microform materials. Don't resist the TEMPTATION for E.. 7 IMAGNIFICENT meal Before the show, • After the show. • TEDDI'S ITALIAN RESTAURANT 119 S. Burrows (in the alley behind Sean) We Will Be Looking Forward To Serving You STORE; Coppolino Given Life for Murdei NAPLES, Fla. (AP) After a trial unprecedented in legal history, Dr. Carl Coppolino was } convicted yesterday of second degree murder of his pretty t young wife, C'arrnela; and im ' mediately sentenced to life im prisonment. A 12-Man jury deliberating less than four, hours, found the 1, slender 34-year-old , anesthe siologist guilty of a charge never before made—murder by injection of the paralyzing drug succinylcboline. Pale and dazed, the dark- haired, hawk-nosed ,Coppolino stood speechlesS while Circuit Judge Lynn Silvertooth intoned the sentence of prison "for the remainder of you: natural life." in the small, hot courtroom. Bailey . To Appeal Equally stunned, Coppolino's celebrated chief counsel, F. Lee Bailey of Boston. shouted that the verdict was "a flat compro . mise between guilt and inno- cence" and predicted that it would be thrown out on appeal. Bailey, who rocketed to fame when he gained a new trial that freed Dr. Sani Sheppard. had predicted when the jury retired Thursday night that it would be back shortly with a 'verdict of innocence. A champagne party had been planned at the Buccaneer Motel where the defense group held forth during the four-week trial. Housel Batt le L . On Eclicatiori Bill Continues WASHINGTON (AP) With a House showdown still at least tv:- weeks off, Republican and Democratic leaders exchanged verbal assaults yesterday in the increasingly political row over extension of federal edu cation aid. Both sides predicted victory and charged their opponents with more concern over politics than over education. "The Johnson administration is employing outright misrep resentation" of GOP proposals because it fears a Republican victory would se, a pattern for the 90th Congress, GOP leader Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich, and Rep. Albert H. Quie, told a news conference. They said the GOP proposal to give states the major role in deciding allocation of federal education funds seeks to reduce both the danger of federal con trol and "the endless red tape which is strangling local school boards in their, dealings with the; vast bureaucracy in Wash ington." Democratic leader Carl B. Albert of Oklahoma at a news conference less than an hour later called the GOP proposal "a piecemeal effort to round up votes—a political bill, not an educational bill." The big issue is the Republi can proposal to give the money to the states and let them de cide how it should be spent in local school districts. The de cisions now are , made by the federal Office of Education. focated retired Army Col. Wil liam E. Farber, husband of his mistress Marjorie. Marjorie, whose visit to au thorities led to both murder charges and who was described by the defense as "a woman scorned," was at her home in Sarasota when the news came. "I hav a sympathy," she said "for Dr. Coppolino's parents Rivkind Appointed As Law Intructor Effectiveness of •the Center for Law Enforcement and Corrections at the University has been auginented through the appointment of Perry A. Rivkind as instructor in law enforcement. He will assume his new duties on May 1. Rivkind brings to this position an extensive back ground of academic preparation and practical experience. For five years he was on the staff of the State At torney of Florida in Miami, Dade County, from : 1963-65 as special investigator for the Rackets and Frabds Di vision. During 1965, he was investigator with the Dade' County Grand Jury4Drgan ized Crime and Vice Probe. He also has been Probation Officer for the non-support division. Circuit Court; po lice road patrolman for the Metropolitan Dade County Public Safety Department, and adjutant and deputy sheriff for the Dade County Sheriff's Air Patrol. A graduate of Florida State University with the , bachelor of science degree PERRY. A. RIVKIND in criminology and corrections, he received the master of education degree in human behavior from Florida Atlantic University in 1966. He also holds the associate of science degree in police science and criminology from Miami-Dade Junior College. He is a graduate of the U.S. Treasury De partment, Federal Bureau of Narcotics Training School, Washington, D.C., and the Dade County Police Academy, Miami. Rivkind has taught courses in criminology and law enforcement for the - U.S. Air Force, the Dade County Police Academy, Dade County Sheriff's Academy and the Metropolitan Court Traffic School, Miami. He is a member of these;professional organization: Phi Alpha, national social welfare honorary; Delta Tau Kappa, international social science honorary; Federal Bureau of Narcotics Alumni Association and the Fraternal Order of ,Police. His duties at - Penn State will include teaching courses in the area of administration of justice and assisting with the coordination of in-service training programs. USG Lecture Series Expands The Undergraduate. Student in Bethlehem House of Tener Government Legal Awareness Hall and continued in other Committee announced Thurs- houses in East and Pollock day night that it haS decided Halls. In addition to a lecture to continue and expand its and question and answer lecture series on the Univer- period. the presentation in sity disciplinary system. dudes the showing Of "The The decision was , reached College Age Slowing Down after Assistant Chairman H. and Growing Up," an award Neil Zimmerman reported that winning film on last spring's all was going well. He said that' apartment visitation demon he "found the response more straticn. Interested house presi than enthusiastic.' dents should contact Zimmer- The series began last week man 238-5814 or 238-5447. ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA AND DELTA CHI -'Cabin Party - featuring Dennis and the Menances Sat., April 29th 8:30-12:30 a.m. Invited guests and rushees welcome NEW FORMS WORSHIP Sunday - 9:00 A.M. Eisenhower Chapel A Significant Experience in Worship and the Arts The multi-i•xiedia service will center on a theme of PEACE. It will use music, .graphics, modern dance, visual arts, and mass media. A continental breakfast and reflective conversation will follow at 10:00 ' A'n Expression of the United Cantpus Ministry. PAGE THREE and his children. But please keep in mind that my husband is dead. My children have no father because of this man's actions." She:had testified that Coppoli no put her in a hypnotic trance, made her his love slave, and she Stood by helplessly and watched while he killed her husband.