TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1949 she Salety Valve 'Not a Draft Evader' TO THE EDITOR: The Daily Collegian of March 18 printed a story on Larry Gara and the recent U.S. District Court decision which found him guilty of supporting and abetting Charles Rickert, of Bluffton College, in non-registration for the present conscription law. The story on Gara was very objective and well done. The pur pose of this letter is to point out that Charles Rickert is not a draft evader. Charles Rickert, as a pre-ministerial student and a pacifist declining to serve in the armed forces, would be eligible for classifications IV D or IV E under the Selective Service Law and thereby exempt from active service in the armed forces. He does not believe in supporting war and further feels that the present Selective Service Law actually promotes war and counteracts any practices of goodwill this country might under take. Since he possesses this belief he is unable to cooperate in any way with the law that makes possible the conscription of men for promotion of war. Quite logically he has refused to register for the draft. Charles Rickert is thereby a non regis trant with no intentions of evading life but a person who is facing his inner religious leadings and being consistent. Not at all incidental to this whole matter is the fact that Gara was convicted without a fair hear ingi not to mention the fact that a U.S. Court is limiting freedom of speech and religious liberties. The case is being appealed to a Circuit Court and is under the care of the Civil Liberties Union. —Eugene L. Mercer Jr. Against Council Politics TO THE EDITOR: Lost, or entirely forgotten, in the current "Politics in student councils ' con- News Briefs Eng Student Council Opening nominations for stu dent council officers to be elected April 5 will be held at the Engi neering Student Council meeting in 106 Old Main at 7 p.m. today. Constitutional revision and re ports from the course rating pro gram will complete the business. Froth Pinnings, engagements and mar riages to be announced in the April issue of Froth must be turn ed in at Student Union by 5 p.m. tomorrow. Civil Engineers A short course in concrete con struction will be offered to chap ter members of the American So ciety of Civil Engineers by the Portland Cement Association. The meetings will be held in 219 EE from 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow and Friday. Camera Club Instruction and practice in por trait pictures will be offered to Penn State Camera Club members at the Penn State Photo Shop at 7 p.m. tomorrow. M=MM The ASCE will hold its annual banquet In the Penn Belle Hotel in Bellefonte April 5. Members are requested to make reserva tions as early as possible. ROTC Training All veterans wishing to be gin advanced ROTC training in the fall should report to 101 Carnegie today. Informa tion concerning physical and other requirements for the four semester course leading to any army commission are available in 101 Carnegie. Another Smash Hit at Centre Stage The PLAYERS have designed another of their entertaining shows in 'This Side of Bedlam' An Original Play by Warren Smith, Penn State Dramatics Professor Opens FRIDAY, March 25, at Centre Stage Tickets on Sale at Dramatics Office THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Letters to the editor must be signed tor inclusion in the Safety Valve, although names will be withheld on request. Tele. shone numbers and addresses must be laeluded to facilitate verilleatien of authenticity of vignatures. Letters exceeding 101 words in length may be cut when required by roam troversy is the opinion of those the issue might affect. Perhaps if some of the opinions of councils and their members on the issue were voiced, more light might be thrown on the subject and a more objective decision arrived at. Members of the Liberal Arts student council in a straw vote were overwhelmingly against allow ing politics to enter their council. Briefly, some of the reasons for these many nays were: 1. Interested people not affiliated with a politi cal party would have little or no chance to become elected to a council. 2. If politics determined who was to be a coun cil member, politics could more easily determine who was to be president of each council. Since council presidents sit-in on All-College Cabinet, students would have a politically packed cabinet. 3. Political party Influences might cause politi cally elected council members to act more toward benefiting their party than toward benefiting the student body whom they supposedly should represent. In the light of the above potentially ruinous situations, many members of the LA student council voiced their hopes against allowing poli tics to enter student councils. —Karl Borish and Jean Moore. • Pressure of official duties has caused Presi dent Truman to cancel a speaking engagement at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a news story says. Of course, MIT hasn't the pretty coeds of Rollins College, either. Wednesday Reading Dr. Phillip A. Shelley, professor and head of the department of German, will read from Goethe's Faust at the fourth in the series of Wednesday Readings in 106 Library at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow. This year marks the 200 anni versary of Goethe's birth. The Library plans an exhibit later in the year. Group Moorings The General Electric Company will hold a group meeting in 10 Sparks at 7 p.m. today. The Corps of Engineers will hold a group meeting in 417 Old Main at 7 p.m. today. State Party The State Party Steering Com mittee will meet in 210 Old Main at 7 p.m. today An Amazing Off or by HOLIDAY Pipe Mixture The pipe that any smoker wants—DANA, the modern pipe, with brightly polished Muni: nun sbank sal paowine imparted brier ttnwl. Z k -A-• Only t, :.' ' .-. 50° with inside wrapper :.`lo4,tw from 12 pocket tins of A r, e 1111.111A1 PIP! 11111711t1 Edit Brief Women play an important role IN AMERICA'S MOST IMPORTANT BUSINESS Peace Opportunities equalling those offered men in the Armed Services . . . the same security, same chances for rapid advancement, same pay scales, same benefits—all these are now avail able to women in the Women's Army Corps and women in the Air Force. These opportunities were EARNED. Earned by the women who served so faithfully, so well, during the war emergency. Earned, perhaps, for YOU, if you can meet the qualifications, if you can meet the c,hallenge of such an unlimited career. For more information, visit your nearest MAIN U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Re- cruiting Stations—now. Cheek these distinguished careers with your advisor or college placement officer. WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS —enlisted or commissioned WOMEN IN THE AIR FORCE —enlisted or commissioned ARMY NURSE CORPS —as commissioned ARMY NURSES WITH THE AIR FORCE —as commissioned WOMEN'S MEDICAL SPECIALIST CORPS as corn Missioned U. 5. ARMY AND U. S. AIR FORCE RECRUITING SERVICE Truman Keynotes Rent Fight, Attacks Real Estate Lobby Late AP News, Courtesy WMAJ WKASHINGTON President Truman sounded the keynote of a fight to extend •federal rent con trols yesterday in a speech before the United States Conference of Mayors. The Chief Executive blamed what he called the real estate lob by for Congressional backward ness in working out a bill along the lines he asked. He and Con gress, said the President, are working together and will contin ue to work together for the good of the country. Without Congressional action, rent controls will expire altogeth er after March 31. Senate Demo cratic Leader Scott Lucas ex pressed the hope that Senators will not use up time talking about other matters. Otherwise, he said, night meetings will be necessary this week. Chairman Burnet Maybank of the Senate Banking Committee said repeal of rent control would be hazardous and unwise. The House of Representatives, meanwhile, passed and sent to the Senate a bill continuing rent ceilings in the District of Colum bia. The bill contains the strict controls which President Tru man has been seeking without success for the country as whole. Coplon Pleads Innocent WASHINGTON—Judith Cop• lon, the former government girl who is accused of giving confi dential information to a Soviiet agent, entered a plea of innocent, yesterday. The plea of innocent was en tered in Washington on a charge of removing secret information from government files. Miss Cop lon also is under indictment in New York on a charge of con spiracy to commit espionage. Almost simultaneously her at torney, Archibald Palmer, dis closed that she contends that the papers involved were merely notes for a book which she in tends to write. He told Washing ton newsmen that the whole case in his opinion is "much ado about nothing." Soviets Control Mark BERLIN Soviet-controlled German police have been attempting to prevent western Berliners from going on a buying spree with their surplus marks. So far this is the only public So viet reaction to the action Sun day in which the Soviet-backed fast mark was outlawed in the western parts of ale city. PAGE THREE