Weather- Cloudy and Warm VOL. 54, No. 34 Fielding Declares Town Election Void Town Council elections of Oct. 21-23 were declared illegal by the Association of Independent' Men Board of Governors elections committee yesterday in a decision handed down by Byron Fielding, committee chairman. Stemming from an editorial LA Council To Hold Ist Coffee Hour The first Liberal "Arts coffee hour will be held from 4 to 5:15 p.m. Monday, it was decided last night at a meeting of the LA Stu dent Council. Watson Leese and Mary Lee Lauffer, co-chairmen of the cof fee hour committee, reported that 35 freshmen and 35 sophomores will receive invitations this week to attend the. gathering Monday in Grange playroom. Paul R. Daugherty, professor of romance language,. will address the first group. Five other faculty mem bers will attend, the coffee hour. The student assessment of 25 cents per person which is given to the council by the 1800 LA stu dents is being used in part to fi nance the coffee hours. The gath erings are to aid students and fac ulty of the LA school become ac quainted, according to the pur pose stated on the invitations. Jane Reber and Norma- Voll mer, representatives on Council, were elected co-editors of the pro posed magazine to be published by the LA school. The magazine will be a 12 to 16 page issue. Calls will be made later for LA students who are interested in forming the staff of the magazine. A letter is being prepared to send to the sen ate committee on student affairs in which the policy of- the maga zine will be stated. The magazine will also be fi nanced mainly through the as sessment which is placed on the LA students: Nine hundred dol lars a year will be made available to Council through the 25-cent as sessment which the student paid in his fees. J Council members, were given folders at the meeting which con tained the names of faculty mem bers to be solicited for the Cam pus Chest. A new constitution for the LA Student Council was presented to the members for approval by Ben Sinclair, chairman of the consti tution committee. The Council amended and approved it. Fifty copies of the new constitution are being prepared. ' Judging Team Wins 6fh*Place Penn State’s dairy products judging team recently placed sixth in the ice cream division of the Collegiate Students’ Interna tional Contest in Judging Dairy Products at Boston. John Mountain was the tenth place winner in the ice' cream contest. Other team members are John Sarikianos, Ronald Sick and Wilson Gramer, alternate. Team coaches are Francis J. Doan, pro fessor of dairy manufacturing, and Dr. George H. Watrous Jr., assis tant professor of dairy husbandry. Twenty-two land grant colleges and one Canadian provincial agri cultural college participated in the contest, sponsored jointly by the American Dairy Science As sociation and Daily Industries Supply 'Association. Ohio State placed first. -i Student Directories Go on Sole Today The Student Directory will go on sale for SO cents, at 1 p.xn. today at the Recorder's office, 4 Willard. ©ftp latlii |§| ©altegiatt nSSF ' ENN STATE that appeared in the Daily Col legian Friday, .the action was taken following the election of 19 representatives and 16 alternates to the council by approximately 80 of the 3000 town independent men. Nomination by Petition The decision was based, hovr ever, on a violation of the consti tution of the council which states that “nominations for represen tatives shall be by petition which must be-signed by 20 or more district electors.” Petitions then must be submitted to and ap proved by the AIM Board of Gov ernors elections committee. The nature of the violation will be presented at the AIM Board of Governors meeting, Fielding said. Suggestions for the handling of the 'election will' also be given, he said. The AIM meeting is sched uled for. 7:30 .p.m. tomorrow in 102 Willard. > Twenty-three hundred postal cards were sent to town inde pendents, with the exception of eighth semester seniors. Some Wards Voteless Nevertheless, in some .wards only one or two men appeared to vote on election nights. In- two wards, no one voted. The highest turnout for any one ward was ten men, although 100 to 200 men live in each ward. No definite plans have been set for.a hew election. According to Fielding, . independent . town men interested in serving on Town Council should secure 20 signatures of men living in their wards. / A list of the names of students living in the various wards may be secured from James McDowell, Town Council secretary, Fielding said. This procedure must be fol lowed by those who were, elected during the Oct. 21-23 elections, he said. 4300 to Play At Band Day More than 4300 high school bandsmen will participate Satur day in the fourth annual Band Day oh Beaver Field.. The Penn State Marching Blue Band will join the high school groups for- a mass demonstration during half-time of the Penn State-Fordham football game. Sixty one bands have accepted invitations to participate. Twenty three visiting bands are directed by Penn State graduates. Twenty other, directors took advanced work at the College. ' Eighteen bands will participate in the program for the first time. Last year only 3000 bandsmen performed. Dr. Hummel- Fishburn, professor of music and music education, originated Band Day in 1950. Fear Keeps 19 from PANMUNJOM, Tuesday, Nov. 3 (d 3 ) —The neutral camp where. 22 U.S. prisoners of war wait rest lessly was (pictured today as a valley of fear. And only fear keeps possibly ,19 of them from asking to go home. The picture - was drawn by a highly Reliable source who cannot be identified, but who is in a pos tion to know what he is talking about. The .Communists list- the 22 as refusing ’to return to the United States. Murder Feared On the one hand, the source, said, is the fear of the 19 that they will be killed by hard-core Communists among them if they try to flee and ask repatriation. On the-, other is the constant dinning in their ears by the Com munists that should they ever del cide to go back to ; their home- STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1953 FOR A BETTER P! Lion, State Parties Name Candidates Faculty Drive Begins PRESIDENT MILTON S. EISENHOWER -ftlls-oui his -pledge card for ihe Campus Chest faculty solicitation drive which beg:ns today. Seated with the President is. Dr. Russell B. Dickerson, faculty chairman. Standing are Richard Gibbs, student chairman, and Kirk Garber, president of the Penn State Ghrisiian Association, which will solicit the administration. Faculty Chest Drive Will Begin Today Student council members will begin soliciting the faculty in their schools for the Campus Chest drive today. Penn State Christian Association members will solicit members of the administration. One hundred per cent participation is the goal of the drive which will continue until Thursday. Faculty contributors may des ignate their donations to the Penn State Christian Association, the World University Service, the Penn State Student Scholarship fund, or the State College, Wel fare fund. The faculty will not be asked to contribute to organizations which conduct campaigns in town. The drive is an effort to com bine all fund raising campaigns into one drive and to eliminate duplicated efforts. Organizations not included in the drive may not conduct their own campaigns on campus. An estimated $4OO was col (Continued on page eight ) land they would be executed for treason. • The informant said that letters from home, from friends as well as relatives, would do as much as anything to erase the fear from the minds of the 19. The others; he added, are past redemption. The camp, watched over by In dian guards, was described as bleak with most of the 22 home sick, bewildered and in, fear of the Communist Americans among them. Sanitation Is Poor Sanitation is inadequate and the only drinking water comes from a v well in a rice paddy. Two of the prisoners are ill. Seven of the Americans, select ed by the Communists, battle for leadership in the camp but only three have shown signs of being genuine Communists. The hard core leaders are under Athlete's Condition Reported Improved A soccer player who was kicked in the abdomen, at a prac tice session last week was re ported “much improved” yester day by doctors at Centre County Hospital in Bellefonte. William Shaw, third semester DIR' student, was taken to the hospital early Wednesday morn ing, suffering from internal bleed ing. He will not be released from the hospital for several days, doc tors reported. Returning the control of a Col. Chong,' a Chi nese former professor. He has amassed “confession story” mate rial he threatens to broadcast to the world if 'any ..of the 22 men go home. Wives, Jobs Promised The Americans have been prom ised good jobs, wives, freedom of travel, and a return to the Unit ed States within five years where “when the revolution comes they are to be generals, or at least leaders.” The informant said most of the men were fearful because of pro- Communist articles they have signed, written or broadcast while in captivity. So far the .United''States has made no attempt to interview any of the 22. Instead, explanation of ficers have waited for letters, homesickness and indifferent food to do their work. Frosh, Soph Elections Set For Nov. 12 Lion and State Parties chose candidates Sunday night to run in the freshman and soph omore class elections Nov. 12. Edwin Kohn, chairman of the All-College elections com mittee, said 237 students attended the State Party meeting, and 239 attended the Lion meeting. A to tal of 1310 students registered with the elections committee last week to be eligible to attend the meetings. Hugh Cline, third-semester arts and letters major, was the State Party choice for sophomore class president, and Robert McMillan, third semester pre-medical ma jor, was named to oppose Cline by the Lion Party. Presidential Candidates James Musser, first semester mechanical engineering major, was the Lion nominee, and Ste ven Jordan, first semester indus trial engineering major, was chosen by the State Party to head the fre.shman class slate. _ Robert ..Harding, third'semester chemical engineering major, was named the vice presidential can didate; and Shirley Mix, third semester physical education ma jor, the secretary-treasurer nom inee for the sophomore class by the Lion Party. Other sophomore nominees of the State Party are Richard Alli son, third semester woods utiliza tion major, vice president, and Barbara Stock, third semester home economics major, secretary treasurer. Other Nominees Other State Party nominees in the freshman class are Joseph Perko, first semester industrial engineering major, vice president, and Marilyn Seltzer, first semes ter home economics major, secre tary-treasurer. In the Lion Party, Robert Ben nett, first semester dairy husban dry major, is the freshman vice president nominee, and Virginia Hance, first semester education major, the choice for secretary treasurer. Russel Martz, third semester agronomy major, was elected by the Lion Party as sophomore clique chairman. Martz replaced Sanford Lichtenstein who re signed last week. Court McMahan, seventh semes ter advertising major, was elected by the Lion Party as senior class vice clique chairman for men; Jane Overmeyer, seventh semes ter bacteriology major; vice clique chairman for women; Eleanor Ni castro, seventh semester educa tion . major, secretary; and Nor bert Solden, seventh semester arts and letters major, treasurer. Deoo fo Attend Civic Assembly Ossian R. MacKenzie, dean of the School of Business, will be one of 65 men and women in atten dance at the American Assembly Nov. 5 to 8 at Arden House, Har riman, N.Y. The American Assembly, found ed at Columbia by Dwight D. Eisenhower when he was presi dent of the university, is a non partisan citizens’ roundtable where public questions are dis cussed. Representatives from business, labor and farm groups, as well as housewives, religious leaders, governmental officials and pro fessional men will make up the discussion group. FIVE CENTS