College to Sign SU Contract Baitg a, , : i i Tettite g .tatt 4 vi VOL. 53, No. 58 STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1952 FIVE CENTS Macßae Reinstated by College Wendell S. Macßae, who was certified as not subversive be cause of evidence which answered the questions of the collgge's loyalty questionnaire,-**`" employed as publications produc tion manager 'in the Department of Public Information Saturday. His reinstatement ended a four month contest over loyalty pro f- cedures which began when Mac- Rae refused to sign the loyalty questionnaire which he disclaimed as a "useless gesture." The executive board of the Col lege Board of Trustees decided Macßae was "completely loyal" after it received the report of Earl G. Harrison, dean of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania's law school. Harrison had been named A to decide the problem by Presi dent Milton S. Eisenhower. Harrison's report, which was approved and endorsed by the College counsel, Love & Wilkin son of Bellefonte, a special seven man faculty committee, and the Faculty Advisory Council's ex ecutive committee, declared that Macßae was "not a subversive person." This decision, the report , said, was based on information obtained from interviews with Macßae and others who gave "ad ditional vital information." This information, according to Harrison, "might be termed new evidence" and led him to the College Horses Take Honors At Stock Show Five championships, three Jib bons, andother special awards were won by three College draft horses last week at the Inter national Live Stock Exposition at Chicago. . "Director ULC," a Percheron stallion, retained his record of never having been defeated in a show. He also retained the Inter national grand championship won last year at Chicago. "Director ULC" was also crowned senior champion after winning first in his class. "Lynda Hope," a four-year old mare, also retained her Int e r national Grand Champion mare title won last year and was chosen Senior Champion mare of the Percheron division. A filly, "Penn State Nievre," making her first appearance in the ring, won first prize in the yearling cla s s. She was also crowned Junior Champion Female of the fair. A silver loving cup and cash prizes were also awarded 'the horses showed by Elmer Taft, superintendent of horses, and Ray mond Moyer, seventh semester animal husbandry major. Student Suspended For Dishonesty . A third semester engineering student has been suspended until September 1953 for dishonesty in an examination,. Frank J. Simes, dean of men, said Saturday. The suspension takes place im mediately. In September the stu dent may apply for readmission, Simes said. , . TODAY'S WEATHER CLOUDY MILD FOR A BETTER. PENN STATE ' Wendell S. Macßae Re-employed by the College conviction that Macßae was now "certifiable under the Pennsyl vania Loyalty Act." Macßae refused to sign the loy alty questionnaire when it was given him, saying he could prove his loyalty by his Marine Oath and other documents. Macßae has said repeatedly that the Pennsyl vania Loyalty Act, known popu- Campus to Town Telephone Calls Raised 5 Cents Rates for telephone calls from campus to town have been raised from 5 to 10 cents, Walter Wei gand, director, department of phy sical plant, announced yesterday. Weigand and R. Y. Sigworth, supervisor of utility of that de partment, discussed the revised phone rates with representatives of Bell Telephone Co. Saturday. The new phone rates have been in effect since Saturday midnight, Weigand said. The Public Utility Commission last Wednesday authorized a $21,- 227,000 a year rate increase for Bell Telephone Co. which sig naled the end of the nickel pay booth call in Pennsylvania_ Trustees OK $12,400 Grants Three gr a n,t s to the College amounting to a total of $12,400 were approved Friday night by the executive committee of the Board- of Trustees, President Mil ton,,. S. Eisenhower announced yesterday. The grants include $7500 to be used by the Automotive Safety Foundation in continuation of the Motor Vehicle Fleet Supervisor Training Program and $3OOO from the American Cyanamid - Co. to es tablish the Lederle. Dairy Nutri tion Grant for the Study of the value of various sources of non protein, nitrogen in dairy cattle rations. The third grant was the re newal of -the, Shell fellowship in chemical engineering for the !Year 1953-54, with a stipend of $l5OO in addition to $4OO for the use of the department. Art Honorary Initiates Exhibit Work -Downtown An exhibit of works submitted 'by new initiates of Pi Gamma Alpha, art honorary, opened, last week at Schlow's Gallery, S. Ath erton. street. . 'Examples of 'water. 'dolors,- oils, p en c iI, pen -and-ink, woodcuts, pastels, and sculpture are featured in the -exhibit,.which_ ends-Friday. larly as the Pechan Act, was "cost ly and useless" and was, in addi tion, a "shield" behind which real subversives may hide. The re-employed Macßae point ed out that a person who wished to undermine the country and state would have no qualms about signing such a loyalty oath. "He .could prove he was a loyal Ameri can by signing his name," Mac- Rae said. William L. Werner, head of the committee formed to have Mac- Rae restored to his position, said Harrison's decision on the case is a complete vindication of Mac- Rae. Werner pointed out that the Harrison report said Macßae was not dismissed (in August) for failure to follow College rules. Macßae, in a statement re leased yesterday, said the Loyalty Review Board had not made a thorough investigation of the case. He blamed this on a lack of ex perience and proper counsel. "I did not supply Earl Harrison . . . with any information that I would' not have given to the board at my hearing last August, had the members chosen to ask for it," Macßae said. No questions were asked, he added. The Pechan Act requires, that the heads of colleges in the state attest to the loyalty of all em ployees. The act does not pre scribe the methods whereby proof of loyalty is to be determined. Enelow Chosen To Head Party Myron Enelow, fifth semester arts and letters major, was select ed clique chairman of the State Party Sunday by the steering committee after former chairman Walter Sachs resigned. State party publicity chairman. and campaign organizer in this fall's elections, Enelow was se lected after Sachs said he would drop out of campus politics corn pletely. Sachs claimed he had put enough time and effort into poli tics and his usefulness to the party was at an end, according to Ene low. Making his break with campus politics complete, Sachs refused even an advisory position, Enelow added. Elsa's Antics Delight 2d Forum Audience Community forum goers found a pleasant diversion from the usual informative lectures last night when Elsa Manchester brought her "Private Music Hall" to Schwab Auditorium' for a one night stand. The commedienne, assisted by the Madhatters comedy quartet and Ray Henderson at the piano had a field day of comedy and song. "Private Music Hall" got off to a humorous but slow start with the inimitable actress garbed in the rags of a scrubwoman sing ing "If You Can't Get in the Cor ners." The scrubwoman turns "thumbs down" on modern "vac youms" in favor of the good old scrub rag. "At the Laundrymat" featured the "entertainer" as a laundrymat patron who enjoys the conversations which take, place as the wash is being done. The program brightened with "I Don't Know Where to Look," in which Miss Lanchester tells the story of a country girl who goes into service at a "gentleman's apartment"in the city and makes good, It is not until the comedy skit "Eaters Anonymous" that the true Elsa Lanchester appears in her full colors. As a former glutton saved by Gaylord Hauser and the Starvation Army, the - hilarious Construction Expected To. Start Next Month College officials will enter into contracts this week for the construction of the Student Union Building and an east wing to the Nittany Lion Inn, President Milton S. Eisenhower said yesterday. Although no definite date has been set for. the start of the construction, officials speculated it would begin early next month. The executive committee of the Board of Trustees Friday night authorized the awarding of the contracts for the two projects to Irwin and Leighton, contractors, of Philadelphia. S. K. Hostetter, College comp troller, said construction will be gin as soon , as possible and the Student Union Building should be completed before the opening of the fall semester, 1954. The Inn, a smaller project, will be corn. pleted at an earlier date. Total Cost Funds for the construction of the Student Union Building will come largely from the $7.50 stu dent fee established by the board President Milt on S. Eisen hower said yesterday a Student Union Building will • contribute in many ways to a better Penn State. Prexy pointed out that the so cial patterns, educational pro gram, and the public relations of the College would benefit. "I am sure that no other sin gle facility would contribute so much," the President concluded. two years ago, following a recom menation from All-College Cabi net. Unexpended College build ing funds will be used to finance the addition to the Inn. The total cost for the SU, in cluding furnishings and equip ment, will be about $2,867,000. The Inn project will require $1,072,000. Since work on the SU is scheduled to begin soon, the $7.50 student fee will be. raised to $lO beginning next fall. This increase was authorized when the fee was established. To Include Auditorium The Board of Trustees origi nally planned to begin the SU construction in 1950, but the Na tional Production Authority put a damper on the College's expecta tions. At that time, the outbreak of the Korean war with the re sulting restrictions placed on the availability of critical materials prevented construction of both projects. The NPA said last year the availability of critical materials in 1952 would determine whether construction could be authorized. Materials for both projects have now been allocated by _the NPA. The SU will be constructed on Holmes Field, across from Os mond Laboratory. Main floor_ fa cilities in the building will in (Continued on page eight) By CHIZ MATHIAS mimic brought down the house with her shrieking testimonials. In her repertroire, Miss Lan chester includes a poem by Oliver Wendell Holmes, "The Ballad of the- Oyster Man" depicting the comical, but ill-fated love of a fisherman's daughter and an oys ter man, and T. S. Eliot's modern jingle "Song of the Jellicles." As a frustrated "Maharanee. of Swat" the •actress dances cloaked in an oriental sari and flauts her tale of romantic woe. Miss Lanchester is her best as a hirdboiled newspaperman offer ing a solution to all world prob lems and . as Fiji Fanny, the siren of the South Seas. In other scenes the actress ap pears at Titania, a sea • shore coquette and as a "Catalogue Woman" who found her dream (Continued. on page eight) La Vie, SU Fee Hikes Approved Two fee increases, a $2 LaVie fee for second semester freshmen and a $2.50 raise in the Student Union -fee as of fall of next year, were approved by the executive committee of the Board of Trus tees Friday night. The LaVie fee, to be assessed second semester freshmen as part of class dues fees for support of the -yearbook, was approved last month by . All-College Cabinet. Because a $4OOO deficit was incur red in the publication of the year book last year the upperclass en rolhnent decreased •this year, it was anticipated that a deficit would again be incurred if a lee increase were not made. At present, sophomores, juniors, and seniors pay $2 a semester toward the LaVie. Second semes ter students will join them next semester.. Because construction on the-new Student Union Building is sched uled to begin shortly, the increase in the SU fee was approved, to be effective next fall. This increase was authorized when the fee was established in June, 1950. At that time the board approved cabinet's recommendation for a $7.50 fee to be increased to' $lO to aid in fi nancing construction and main.. tenance of the building. Second semester freshman next fall will pay $4.50 more in student fees, while all other students at the College will - pay ' 2 addi tional $2.50 for the SU fee in crease. 'Coal Scuttle' Now on Display At SU Desk The "Coal Scuttle," symbolic- ot Pitt-Penn State football rivalr3r,is now on display at the Student Union deSk in Old Main. The scuttle, presented •to both s c h o o I s by the Interfraternity Councils of th e institutions, is about 150 years old and wasim ported from England. The cost of the scuttle, reported about $lOO, was paid by an anony mous donor. At present the trophy is eri:. graved with only its title infor mation. After being on display, scores of all Pitt-Penn State games will be enscribed. The scuttle annually will go 'to the winner of the traditional game. The College is the first to have the trophy by virtue of its 17-0 victory over Pitt last month. Since Pittsburgh had wo n 'last year's game, the school held the trophy during this year's game. The scuttle was presented to the mascots of the two school---the Pitt Panther and the Nittany Lion —in a pre-game ceremony. Ag Council to Meet The Agriculture Student Colin. cil will meet at 7 tonight in 103 Agriculture. • SHOPPIN€ DAYS' TO CHRISTMAS