TtittADAY, MAY 27, 1952 IFC Commended For Pi Lam Stand The suspension of the charter of the Omega Gamma chapter of Pi Lambda Phi was not a pleasant piece of business for the Interfraternity Council, or for any other group concerned. The council„ aware that stern -disciplinary action had to be' taken, never faltered once in its de termination, to cooperate with the College to see that appropriate action was taken. T h e group is to be highly commended for its stand., With the average age Of college students now once again pretty well back to its pre-war nor- Mal; the council realized it was faced with a now-or-never decision. If the IFC -had turned its back on the infractions committed by the fraternity, it would not only have weakened its Position with the College,. but would undoubt edly have lowered its effectiveness as a spokes man for the fraternitieS. As it is, the IFC has firmly established itself as a force among the fraternities. The suspension of the Pi Lam charter for nearly One year is a harsh penalty, but in committing its offenses the fraternity must have realized what the consequence could be if Caught.' .11 decided to take the risk, and lost. But even .so, some leniency was shown the group. Permission was granted for the members to operate as a local club outside -the chapter house. and to select club members on a basis to be determined by the national office, the chapter adviser, and the College administration. In addition, the way was left open for the fraternity to eventually regain its former stand ing on the campus. - • A representative of the fraternity has stated that the members of the group will show an active and sincere interest in campus acf_vi ties next year. We hope they will, and hope that once their penalty period is up,• they will - have no trouble in rejoining the - national or ganization. It is too bad that Pi Lambda Phi must be held up to other fraternities as an example of what - can happen , to them if they step too far out of line. The Interfraternity Council has shown it means business. We hope ,the warning is heeded. Class Gifts Chosen Through the Years. Each year the age-old controversy appears on almost every-campus in the country. The ,sen ior class is faced with the decision of finding an .acceptable, practicable, and unique present to give their soon-to-be Alma Mater. This spring the discussion of what was to be the 1952 senior class gift aroused many and varied feelings. It is probable that similar dis cussions and arguments have occurred since the first gift was given to Penn State in 1861. The Penn State senior class gifts have ranged from a sundial located on the front campus, a gift of the class of 1915, to the elevator in the Infirmary donated by the class of 1934. A steel wireless tower was contributed by the class of 1912, but was removed in 1924 because of fire hazard. Many of our familiar traditional campus sights are owed to preceding class gifts. The class of 1900 is responsible for the benches on campus. Class Ivy on Engineering Building, the Aud itorium, the tower of the Armory, Carnegie Hall, and Mac Allister Hall was a gift of the classes of 1908 through 1912. The terrace in front of • Old Main and the drinking fountain at the Old Willow were do nated by the class of 1913 and 1914, respectively. Memorial gates to the campus were given by classes of 1916 through 1918 and the classes of 1925 and 1926. The class of 1937 is to be thanked for their donation of the :Westminster chimes in the tower of Old' Main. The famous Lion Science Helps Catch Criminals By HELEN LUYBEN With only blobs •of red paint found on a wrecked car to go on, Dr. Mary L. .Willard, professor of chemistry and well-known expert in criminalistics, can, pin-point guilt onto one of two trucks ,in volved in a tragic three-car col lision. Here's the Story. It was 8 a.m. on a January day,. as a mother stgod combing her six-year -old daughter's hair by a window in their, home. On, the highway in front of the house, two men in a green car traveled slowly north. A new red truck followed the. green car. An older truck, re painted red, approached the two froth the other. direction. Inside the little girl said, "Mommy, the red truck is getting awfully close to the green car." , Dr. ,Willard was telling this story, illustrating it with little drawings in this repoiter's note-' book, in an interview in her offiee `laboratory. Short and white-haired, Dr. Wil lard sat amid comparison micro p6opes, and More microscopes, ex plaining work with scientific ,deteetioir which, has 'made STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 27, 1952 Shrine was given to the College by the class Of 1941. . Innumerable scholarship and memorial, funds have been class gifts over the, years. Funds for further construction on campus have been given by various classes. Loan funds have been given by six senior classes. Such practical presents as the Beaver Field scoreboard, money toward a Student Book Store, an organ and two pianos, a telescope, and a fund to buy more books for the library have been donated by various classes. The class of 1952 has not yet announced what their gift to the College is to be. Their decision will contribute a gift which in fifty years will undoubtedly be another tradition on the Penn State campus Safety Valve Physics Libeary Closes File of Old Blue Books TO THE EDITOR: After five Years of trying to provide students in the School of Chemistry and Physics with a file of old "blue books," the Physics library feels compelled to withdraw and discontinue the effort. Th e experiment has failed largely because of the irresponsible atti tude of a few. students. The books have been mutilated and some have been removed from the room for keeps. These books cannot be re placed, for such numbers of tests must be ac cumulated over a period of years. This service has been provided through the generous efforts of Dr. R. L. Weber and the secretaries in the Physics department. The li brarian has tried every means possible to keep the books in good order and available to all students. But this has been defeated by a few who tore whole sets from the books or took the books away altogether. It . is with regret that they have brought this about for the many conscientious and worthy ones are denied a valuable source of reference. If students through their governments can arrange a method for keeping such a file, all assistance will be given them in the project. However, it will require tears to accumulate any substantial number of such tests. These file,s covered , all tests from 1946-1950 in clusive. Gazette ... DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB, TUB, 6:45 p.m. OMICRON NU, Home Economics living cen ter, 7 p.m. CATHAUM: Tuesday—lndian Uprising 1:58, 3:53, 5:48, 7:43, 9.:44 Thurs day— Son of Dr. Jekyll, Friday—The Marrying Kind. STATE: Tuesday—Flight to Mars 1:54, 3:47, 5:40, 7:33, 9:25, Wednesday—The Green Glove, Friday—Red Mountain: NITTANY: Tuesday Death of a Salesman 6:00, 7:54, 9:48, Thursday—Room for One More, Saturday—Trail Guide STARLITE DRIVE-IN: Tuesday Ten Tall Men, plus The Highwayman 8:30 STUIENT EMPLOYMENT Woman for evening clerking. Man to work for part of rent of downtown apartrmlnt. No children. Work on college farms any time during week. Clerking 20-30 hours per week during summer. • Work for room rind board for summer or for summer and ' fall. Opportunity for foreign student to work in western section of country. Housework. Room; board, transportation, and 'good salary offered. Couple for local summer employment. Wife-to do office work on weekends for rent of apartment. May have one child. Husband for work in exchange for apartment for couple. COLLEGE PLACEMENT The Vulcan Soot Blower division of Continental Fofindry & Mtchine Co. will' interview Tune graduates in M.E." May 28. her famous throughout the United States. She continued. As the trucks approached each other, the green car spun around on a small bit of ice in front of the house and crossed in front of the southbound truck. Both 'men were thrown from the automobile and killed. Here Dr. Willard came into the picture. Her job was to determine whether the new truck had started the grden Car into its skid, or Whether the whole resptintibility was on the older truck: Large blObs of red paint on the license tag and the back fender of the detholished car, examined un der a spectrograph, were found to be the same as the paint on the old truck. The 'new truck was cleared from all guilt. . This is just one example of the kind of work Dr. Willard does each' day in her laboratory on this campus. A native of State College, she began her work ,in the field of criminalistics by, testing for al cohol content in the blood. Since then she has.gone on to develop many new methods , of chemical analysis, forensic tick; 'and blood identification, to —Bev Dickinson —Mrs. R. U - . Blasingame Asst. in charge of Physics Reading Room Tuesday,, May 27 AT THE MOVIES Mention only a few. Picking a small piece of wool from this reporter's sweater, Dr. Willard held it between her small fingers and eiplained, "You know, if a man hit you and he had on a signet ring ? he'd catch some tiny piece of wool in his ring. "We could take that little piece of wool, examine it, and tell you that it was green. We. could tell yOu if it were new or reworked wool, and even what kind of sheep it carpe from. All froth that little sample—that •little piece of fuzz:" New• methods of crime detec tion, Dr. Willard said, are making not only the scientist, but even the _hardened criminal realize that crime doesn't pay. Dr. Willard's aim is to deVelop the field of scientific crime inves tigation beyond the hobbyist and avocationist field. She would like to see modern criminalistics lab oratories, accessible to everyone, in every state. . "Dr. Willard's work takes her to . testify in courts throughout the state. Here she said she feels the ordinary jurist is a. "little hazy" about the use of fechniCal data in laboratory - reports. .She believes education would, be helpful. Little Man On Ca • ‘"Would you call back? Professor Snarf is grading term papers right now." interpreting the News owers of President 15,f fluted 160 ears Ago By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst President Truman, the Supreme Court, Congress and the Ameri can people are now going through a process regarding the steel dis pute which seems actually to have been envisioned by the drafters of the Constitution. The evidence has been dug out of the long-hidden papers of James Wilson, Philadelphia lawyer and member of the drafting committee, by Richard Barry, former New York Times reporter who is work ing on the third edition of his book, "Mr. Rutledge of South Carolina," John Rutledge was chairman of the drafting committee, which also included Edmund Randolph, . the governor of Virginia. Rutledge was perhaps the only man in America who had ever been, by legisla , live authority, a virtual dictator. . During the revo lution he had been granted "all power" by the r t l / 4‘. Assembly of South Carolina. He remained in this position for 54 days, until on his own motion his right to inter fere with trial by jury was re-, moved, and he was required to consult with the state council on important affairs "when conven ient." This sort of consfitutional diCtatorShip had lasted. for two years. Years later this experience re mained an important factor with hini. He assigned Randolph to write the first draft of the Constitution. Wilson and Randolph wanted the powers of the President sharply circumscribed even in wartime. The third and controlling draft of the docurrient is among the Wilson papers, showing where Rutledge struck out the timid phraseology with'regard to wartime power and made the President "commander !n chief." Then came the matter of peate tinie poWers. Wilson wrote that it required more debate than any other clauses except those defin ing the power of the judiciary. Wilion submitted several drafts closely defining tile President's powers. Slowly he and Randolph were worn down by Rutledge. They boiled it down finally to the single phrase about the President being the Chief Executive. Rutledge's argument, Wilson re ported at the time, was that the definition of "executiy,e" should be made only when the powers are at stake. "Anything less is unworthy of the powers," he said. If the President errs, there is Con- PAGE SEVEN By Bibler pus ;•• ;4 'Li) • .1 gress and the judiciary to correct There, in the Wilson papers which were not unearthed for 160 years, seems to be a dependable statement of what was in the minds of the Constitution's fram ers. It is another marvel„in the backgroUnd of one of the greatest governmental documents ,in the world, written in such a strangely different America from that of to day, yet written to encompass even the storms of a modern na tion. The framers obviously foresaw that the President should. have the fight to act in emergency. The definition of art emergency, and how far the President might go under it, was left for the day of need. The President can apt, the Congress and the court shall de cide if he is right. In the particular issue of today, the steel matter, it will be recalled that the drafters of the Constitu tion, Rutledge in• his actions in South Carolina both as clictator and later chief justice, the .entire fbundations of America, were strongly predicated upon the com mon law brought from England as the basis of protection of both hu man and property rights. Aiumnus Wins Editing Prize Quentin FL Fehr, a graduate of the Department of Journalism in 1941, has.been awarded first prize in the annual Mass Transporta tion Magazine contest for editing the nation's best transit company employees' newspaner for com panies with more than 1000 em ployees. The award was made to Fehr as editord of PTC News, a bi-weekly oublication of the Philadelphia Transportation Co. Fehr has won two other na tional prizes for his publications. As editor of Youthadelohia, Phil adelphia YMCA. monthly, he won first prize for the nation's-best "Y" paper in 1943. He received the top national award in 1950 as editor of the Philadelphia Poster, Junior Chamber of CoMmerce monthly. r/ 'LI