Penn State Welcomes NSA Conference Delegates . 4 40 . ' " NSA .t . 411, NSA EXTRA ~,u mnirr (:,,,L-„,;;- T o ti rgian „T., EXTRA PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE STUDENTS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE fOL. 26—No. 1 PRUSNA Maps Future Policy Controversy Rages on Question Of USNSA Affiliation with lUS Affiliation of USNSA with the International Union of Students has been one of the most hotly-debated topics in NSA's short history. After many hours of discussion last year, the Constitutional Con vention voted to send a four-man negotiating team to the annual lUS International Assembly to discuss affiliation of NSA with lUS. On March 1, NSA announced that it had accepted the resigna tions of its interim representatives on the lUS Secretariat at Prague and had withdrawh its negotiat ing team. This action followed a series of incidents connected with the Czechoslovakian coup. Controversial Question This announcement touched off a storm of controversy. Delegates will be confronted with the ques tion of whether or not NSA is shirking responsibility to the world student community in ter minating relations with lUS. lUS is the only existing organ ization of its kind. From its headquarters in Prague it con ducts annual international as semblies. Despite the fact that the present lUS Secretariat is predominantly communist, NSA decided to negotiate for affilia tion in the interest of interna tional cooperation and under standing. An interim representative to the secretariat, and a proxy, were dispatched to Prague. During the winter, a four-man negotiating team was picked from student applicants throughout the U. S. to go to Prague this summer and negotiate for affiliation on behalf of American students. The interim representative, William Ellis of Harvard, left for Switzerland because of illness, and James Smith of the Univer sity of Texas, his proxy, took over. Student Demonstration A student demonstration marching to see President Benes was dispersed after five student representatives had been per mitted to enter the presidential palace during the Communist coup. One hundred eight stu dents were arrested subsequent to the demonstration. Communist (Continued on page four) NSA Sponsors Student Ships U. S. Maritime Commission and Coast Guard Waiver Acts, whose authority was to have expired on ',larch 31, have both been extend ed by Congress for one more year. This extension, for which NSA stagt an intensive campaign, will ha's, a far reaching effect on American student travel abroad this summer. Provides Student Ships the, Maritime Comndssion had Jeen permitted to lapse, the student ships it operated would not have sailed this .summer. tin der the provisions of the Coast Guard Waiver Act, the stringent standards for the fitting and con ditioning of ships of American registry were relaxed to some ex tent tc cover the wartime emer gency. If this act had expired, many ships would hal,: had to stay in drydock all summer, re conditioning to .neet the old qual ificati Lis. PRUSNSA Urged Action L_ the Pennsylvania Region. NSA urged students and student ;overnments to write to congress men on the committees consider in the extension of the acts. A list of these congressmen was sent to every Pennsylvania college and junior coll THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1948-STATE . COI YGE, PENNSYLVANIA Workshop Plan Replaces Panel Pennsylvania Region of NEA has discarded the panel method of discussing current student problems in favor of a more in formal "workshop" method. Students who are well informed ox- the topics fix each workshop will act as discussion leaders. Dis cussion will center around current programs and problems. Workshops will attempt to bring in new ideas and programs, and will formulate concrete plans of action for regional implemen tation. Regional committees will be set up on various -ampuses to carry out the programs. Interest and participation will be stimulated ay discarding the formaity of the panel procedure. Plans and programs originating in ea,..n grout will be explained at the plenary sessions, where criticisms and suggestions will be made, and final approval voted on. History Reveals USNSA Growth From 25 Delegates to Prague United States National Student Association was conceived by 25 American students who gathered in New York to sail to Europe for the World Student Congress at Prague, Czechoslovakia, in August, 1946. Ten of the United States delegates had been elected by the stu _ th the remaining 15 representing dent bodies of 10 universities, w national student organizations. While on their ship these stu dents realized that they could not democratically represent tne students of American colleges and universities to the students of the world. When the delegation returned home it was decided to call a con ference of American students to sound out campus opinion on the desirability of forming a na tional student organization. Preliminaries Over 700 delegates represent ing 800,000 students of 300 col leges and universities and 20. na tional student organizations met at the University of Chicago in December 1946 to discuss the pro posed national student organiza tion. A continuations committee was elected to arrange the Constitu tional Convention and draft a proposed constitution. • The Constitutional Convention was held at the University of (Continued on page three) Meals Delegates zo Ine LRUSNSA aonvenzion will eat in the ban duet room on the second boor az the State College Hazel at 12:30 and 5:30 o'clock tomcw row, and at 12:30 p.m. Satur day. Temple Dean Keynotes Convention As 150 Assemble for Plenary Session Dr. A. Blair Knapp, Dean of Students at Temple University and one of the nation's foremost educators, will be the keynote speaker of the Pennsylvania Region of the National Student Association's second conference in 119 Osmond Laboratory at 6:30 o'clock tonight. Regional President James T. Harris will deliver salutations to the assembly. Charles S. Wyand, administrative assistant to the President of the College, will extend greetings to more than 150 delegates on behalf of the ad ministration. William Lawless, recently elected All - College President, will welcome the vis itors for All-College Cabinet and ,the student body. Tomorrow each delegate will attend national affairs workshops in the morning and international affairs workshops in the after noon, where discussion will be guided by a delegate particularly well informed on each topic to be considered. Each workshop will discuss various aspects of the student problems on its agenda, plan a program of defi nite action within the region and assign various phases of the pro grams to PRUSNA colleges hav ing a special interest in the work. National Workshops USNSA To Meet At Wisconsin USNSA's first National Student Congress will be held in Madison, Wisconsin, from August 23 to 28. Approximately 600 delegates will evaluate NSA's progress dur ing the past year and establish the program and policies for the com ing year. Only colleges that have ratified the National Constitution and paid their national dues are eligi ble to send one to seven delegates, depending on enrollment. Mem ber schools are also eligible to send as many alternates as regu lar delegates, although alternates will have neither a voice nor a vote except under the proxy rules to be set up by' the congress. The National Executive Corn- 1 mittee has arranged four interna tional and six national workshops. Reports and proposals will result from discussion in panels and workshops and will be submitted to plenary sessions for further ac tion. Constitutional amendments will also be considered, as well as the election Jf national officers for the coming year. A travel pool has been arranged so that delegates traveling from distant points will receive some ti.avel reimbursement. The pool applies, howex, er, only to dele gates, and not to alternates or observers. News Coverage Best in Nation Informing every American stu dent of the aims and diversified programs Jf NSA is one of its most difficult problems. National ai.d regional publicity offices have been established to provide com pete coverage of NSA news. PRUSNSA Publicity 'Best' News coverage in the Pennsyl ania region has been exception ally complete, according to the NSA National Executive Commit tee, whi h called Pennsylvania publicity "the best in the is tit_. .Headed ay Ralph Lee Smith, Jf Swarthmore College, the Regional Publicity Office has emphasized campus distribution nd coverage Copies of a bi-weekly News Let ter go tc the president of each of the 79 colleges and 18 Junior col leges in the state, to all student goy ?rninents, to every campus newspaper, to NSA delegates, a1..-nates .. - nates and observers on regional'. campuses and to a list of publicity "specials." In this way items like NSA:: tri-nutic-► tour this summer reach ed Pennsylvania campuses in time `or interested students 4,0 participate. Students Take Tri-Nation Tour National Student Association's International Activities Commis sion is completing arrangements for a tri-nation tour, a travel and study trip through France, Hol land and England for 90 Ameri can students chosen by the com mission from approximately 350 applicants. Foreign Students Assist Arranged by NSA in coopera tion with the British, Dutch, and French National Unions of Stu dents, the tour is the first of its kind. The group will visit large cities and well-known areas in :he three countries. Prominent local citizens will be on hand to guide the study and sightseeing. Students selected for the tour wil' embark from Quebec, Can ada, aboard the Kota Inten, a Dutch troop transport, on June 18 ane will return either to Quebec or New York on September 15. Cost of the trip, including passage both ways and all accommoda tions abroad, is $550. More Tours Next Year NSA plans to arrange more tours of this type next year for American students. It will also continue to work with the World Student Service Fund in organiz ing and publicizing the many WSSF tours abroad. In this way NSA hopes to accomplish its ob jectives of promoting opportuni ties for tra -, el and a greater un derstanding of world problems. Students were selected on the basis of a questionnaire and a brief essay stating the reasons fur wishing to participate in the tour. Ralph Lee Smith, Pennsylvania Region Publicity Director, was among those chosen to make the tour. Who's Who Among NSA Officers One of the most successful of all the thirty NSA regions during this first year of operation has been the Pennsylvania Region. Par ticularly responsible for this success are the regional officers. among them two students from Penn State. PRUSNSA was fortunate in selecting SUCI , a capable list for its inaugural year. The choice of succe-4surs to these officers will be con sidered in a plenary session of the convention here on Saturday Ted Harris Regional presi dent; a June graduate, cum laude, of LaSalle College, Philadelphia; intends to , attend law school. Spends most of waking hours on NSA work Bob Troxell Regiumil vie.-- president; active. in campus stu dent government and past vice president of the Penn State All- College Cabinet; graduated this week with a BS in Industrial En gineering. Bill Heckler Regional vice president m charge of the domes tic affairs program; a student at Temple University with interests many student activities. Alias "Wild Bill." Harry Brown Regional vice wesident in charge of interna tional affairs; another Penn Stat er; member of debate team and A student government work shop will analyze the work al ready done in this field and con sider several proposals for the improvement of student govern ments, their relations with NSA and with each other. Discrimina (Continued on page two) 1.94 Colleges Ratify USNSAConstitution One hundred ninety-lour col leges have ratified the USNSA Constitution, 14 mom than the quota necessary to place the con stitution on a permanent basis the national office has announced. According to the ^oastitution written by the Madison conven tion in September, 1947, a major ity of the student bodies repre iented at the conference had to ratify the document within nine ,tiontlis. Otherwise the constitu tion would be considered provi -ional. Ratification was accomplished either by a vote of the student body or by action of student gov ernments on each campus. past All-College Parliamentarian also chairman of 'Tribunal, the Inc, judicial body. Karen Knaplund Regional .-a.u.'elary and only coed officer. Student at Bryn Mawr where she is particularly interested in stu dent government and helps out at the NSA - established Student Government Clinic there. Harry Reitz Treasure'. at tends Bloomsburg State feathers' College where he is past president of the Community Government As aeration, and an assistant dean of men as a student. Ralph Smith —Publicity Direc tur; respunsible for the meaty n.. 1. letters distributed in the Pennsylvania Region. lie will go :abroad this summer on the txi nation tour spunsuied by NSA.