The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 20, 1954, Image 1

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    Weather—
Partly Cloudy
And Cool
VOL. 54. No. 142
Encampment
Plans to Go
To Cabinet
All-University Cabinet will re
ceive a report tonight from Allan
Schneirov, StUdent Encampment
chairman, announcing the eight
workshops planned for the en
campment.
Schneirov announced yesterday
encampment will run for a three
day period from noon Wednesday,
September 8, to ,noon Saturday,
September 11.
Mark Weiner, Traffic Court
chairman, will present a four
point proposal for changes in. the
AGENDA
Roll call
Minutes of previous meeting ,
Reports of officers
Adoption of agenda
Reports of committees: •
1. National Student. Association
2. All-University food commit
tee
3. Encampment committee
4. Report on campus politics
5. AU-University traffic court
S. Campus Chest
7. Elections committee
Old business:
• 1. Insurance investigation
New • business
Announcements •
Adjournment
campus parking regulations and
procedures -for next semester.
Edward Kohn, former head of
the elections committee, will pre
sent his final financial report and
ballot procedures for registration.
He will not present any policy on
the election code.
Richard Lemyre, former All-
University president, will make
another report on his proposed
student insurance program.-
Androcles to Elect
Androcles, junior men's hat so
ciety, will elect officers after a
banquet at 6:30 tonight in the
Allencrest Tea Room, John Car
penter, president, has announced.
Instructors Given
Fall Timetables
Fall timetables were distrib
uted to instructors yesterday,
Rey V. Watkins, scheduling of
ficer, announced. Students
may see the timetables in in
structors' offices, the Pattee
Library, in counselors' an d
hostesses' rooms, and in the
basement of Willard Hall. •
The timetables distributed
contained courses, section s,
and hours for classes.
Students may purchase com
plete timetables in August,
containing courses, sections,
class hours, instructors, an d
rooms by mailing 25 cents to
the scheduling office, 4 Wil
lard. Complete timetables will
also be sold in September be
fore registration.
U.S., Pakistan Agree to Defense Pact
KARACHI, Pakistan, May 19 VP)—Pakistan and the United States today signed a one-year
mutual defense pact under which America will help equip and train the armed forces of this stra
tegic nation of more than 75 million at the eastern gateway to the Middle East.
The Soviet Union, India. and -Egypt have denounced the pact, but both Washington and Karachi
officially proclaimed it another step to consolidate the strength of the free world. This was an obvious
reference to the menace of Com
munist aggression.
Both the United States and Pak
istan have mutual aid arrange
ments with Turkey, western bas
tion of the oil-rich Middle East
Pakistan has ' been a member
of the British Commonwealth
since it gained independence' in
1947.. It has a common border
with India, and the northern area
of West Pakistan is within a short
distance of both Russia and Red
China.
Under the new pact, Karachi
agreed to cooperate with Wash
ington in controlling trade with
nations -threatening the mainten-
I.
ott
..‘ .
4fr i
r
Board of Trustees Accepts
Faculty Traffic Proposal
Plan Will Be Submitted
In Cabinet Report Tonight
Forum Ticket Sale
Begins Tomorrow
Less than 200 reserved tickets to .the Community Forum speech
by Sena Wayne Morse will go on sale at 8 a.m. tomorrow at the
Student Union desk in Old Main. • Tickets are $1.50.
Senator Morse will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Schwab Audi
torium. His address on "Needed: A Realignment of Political Parties"
will be the last in the forum
series.
Town Council
Asks Ending
Of Dual Vote
Town Council approved a mo
tion. Tuesday night calling for
council representatives on the As
sociation of Independent Men's
Board of 'Governors to suggest
before AIM that the procedure
whereby board members get a
dual vote be investigated.
The elimination of the dual vote
would in effect eliminate the
practice of railroading legislation
through council, according to Gil
bert Offenhartz, eighth semester
'arts and letters major, who made
the motion.
Officers of Town Council, ac
cording to AlM's constitution, are
permitted to sit with the Board
of Governors and are given a vote
at all AIM meetings. In this man
ner, council officers may vote on
an amendment at an AIM meet
ing, only to vote for it again as
it passes council approval.
Also approved were four-amend
ments proposed by the Board of
Governors of AIM. The first,. and
most widely discussed proposal
suggested that the chairman of
AIM receive a yearly compensa
tion up to $lOO.
The second proposed that the
executive authority of the. Board
of Governors be vested in the
chairman, vice chairman, secre
tary, treasurer and presidents of
the dorm areas.
The third provided for the es
tablishment of five standing corn
mittees with, a chairman to be
appointed to each. The fourth
concerned membership on the Ju
dicial Board of Review.
•
Used Book Agency
Will Open May 31
The Penn State Used Book
Agency will be open 1 to 5 p.m.
May 31 through June 4 at the
Temporary Union Building to re
ceive books to be sold at the be
ginning of the fall semester, ac
cording to Paul Hood, ÜBA man
ager.
ance of world peace. This is aimed
at preventing the shipment of
strategic goods to the Communist
bloc. .
The pact provides for a U.S.
military advisory group in Pakis
tan, plus assurances, from the
Karachi government it will not
use the arms aid for aggressive
purposes or against the United
States. There is no provision for
U.S. bases in Pakistan.
Like other mutual aid pacts ne
gotiated by Washington, it was an
executive agreement not requir
ing confirmation by the M.S. Sen
. te.
FOIL A BETTER PENN STATE
STATE COLLEGE, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1954
Morse, a former Republican,
resigned from the party in 1952
and campaigned for Adlai Steven
son and the Democrats in the
Presidential elections. As a mem
ber of Senate. where he is serv
ing his second six-year term,
Morse had voted independent of
either party.
He entered politics in 1944 from
the University of Oregon Law
School, where he had become
dean at 31. He was elected to
the Senate in 1944 and re-elected
in 1950. His present term expires
IJanuary, 1957.
Morse was born in Wisconsin
and received a master's degree in
[ economics from the University . of
I Wisconsin in 1923. He taught pub
lic speaking at the University of
Minnesota and studied law. He
studied at Columbia University
on a graduate law fellowship and
in 1929 went to the University
of Oregon as an assistant profes
sor of law. In two years he be
came dean of the law school.
During the war he served on
the President's Railway Emer
gency Board and the National
War Labor Board.
Morse will arrive in State. Col
lege in time for dinner tomorrow
and will leave soon after the
speech. The Senate is still in ses
sion.
Seymour Wins
lM D iscussion
Marjorie Seymour of Zeta Tau
Alpha won the women's intra
mural discussion trophy for the
second consecutive year Tuesday
night...
This
This was the third year the
trophy was won by Zeta Tau Al
pha.
The contest, sponsored by Delta
Alpha Delta, women's debate
honor society, was an informal
discussion on "Would more reli
gious education better our mor
als?"
Seven coeds participated in the
contest. Members of Delta Alpha
Delta and the women's debate
team served as timekeepers and
judges.
India and the Soviet bloc have
criticized the pact bit t erly
throughout its negotiation, ex
tending over several months. In
dian Prime Minister Nehru claim
ed it would tip the military bal
ance l'etween India and Pakistan
—still at odds over Kashmir—
while Communist spokesman as
serted it would •create a U.S.-
backed "military bloc in the Near
and Middle Ea s t against the
U.S.S.R."
Egypt also attacked it as a "con
spiracy" aimed at luring Moslem
states into a Western defense net
work already rejected by Cairo.
rgiatt
The Board of Trustees has passed a new plan for the regu
lation and fining of faculty members, staff employees, and
graduate students who violate campus parking restrictions.
The approved plan will be part of a progress report sub
mitted to All-University Cabinet tonight by Mark Weiner,
newly appointed Traffic Court chairman.
Weiner will present a four-point
plan tonight for a change in the
use of money collected from vio
lations, ,the system of fining vio
lators, the membership of Traffic
Court, and the registration of cars
on campus. The plan was basi
cally drawn up by James Dunlap,
former - head of the Court.
Committee on Report
The new fining system is the
outcome of a three-man commit
tee made up of Ernest B. McCoy,
director of athletics; Walter H.
Wiegand, director of the depart
ment of physical plant; and Os
siari R. MacKenzie, dean •of the
College of Business Administra
tion, which advised that such
violators be fined in a manner.
similar to that enforced on under
graduate violators. Weiner said
the fining sysem for faculty and
staff members has not been de
termined yet, but graduate stu
dents will be tried with Under
graduate violators.
$1297 Collected
The first part of Weiner's pro
posal will be a plan for the distri
bution of money collected by the
court from violators. During the
period from September to May
12, the court - collected $1297,
Weiner stated.
The bulk of this sum was col
lected during the second semester.
From September to February
$251 was collected; from Febru
ary to May 12,' $1046 was col
lected. Seventeen cars were sent
home, and 35 students were
placed on probation.
Money which is collected by
the court has been gisien to the
inter-class budget system in the
past helping to pay the costs of
student government and similar
student .activities.
Weiner's proposal will ask that
50 per cent of this money be
placed-in a fund next year for the
building of student parking areas,
(Continued on page eight)
Emerson Society
Submits Proposals
Emerson Society, student group of the Unitarian faith, submitted
a list of proposed changes for the new University Christian Associa
tion to Harold K. Schilling, chairman of the Penn State Christian
Association committee, yesterday.
Revisions included in the proposal call for substituting "Believ
ing in the principles taught by Christ . . ." for "BelieVing in God in
carnate in Jesus the Christ . . ."
in the statement of orientation in
the new groups' working papers,
and altering the qualifications for
mem oership set down in the
working papers.
' The membership requirement
states "Any denomination or stu
dent religious organization con
sidered Protestant as that term
is defined by the National Coun
cil of Churches of Christ" is eli
gible. The • revision would have
the requirement read "Any de
nomination or student religious
organization considered Protes
tant is eligible."
Another revision calls for sub
stituting "to proclaim the Christ's
Truths . . ." for "to proclaim the
Gospel . . ." in the purposes of the
organization.
The society has decided not to
suggest to the administration at
Scheduling
See Page 4
High Number
Of Conflicts
Is Explained
An explanation for the numtmr
of conflicts which have occurred
in this semester's examinations
was offered yesterday by Ray V.
Watkins, scheduling officer.
Watkins said a major cause of
conflicts is the shortened exam
ination period this semester.
Usually the exam period is eight
or nine days.
This semester it is only seven
and-one-half days.
Another reason for the conflicts
is that all senior grades must be
turned in by June .2. This leaves
only six. times to schedule exams
if seniors do not wish to take more
than two exams on one da y.
Classes with .seniors in them have
all had to be scheduled either
May 29, 31, or June 1.
Also there are approximately
225 courses with multiple sections
totaling over 1000. These multi
ple sections involvq some students
several times, so almost 40,000
cases must be taken care of, Wat
kins said.
Watkins explained that with all
the individual cases to be taken
care of, the scheduling office has
quite a job.
Graduation instructions
Graduation instructions for
seniors have been issued by
David H. McKinley, University .
marshall. Seniors may pick up
the instructions in the offices
of their respective deans.
this time that the name of the
new group be changed, Conrad
Trumbore, society president, said
yesterday. Sunday night the so
ciety decided that unless the
working papers were changed to
allow Unitarians to join, it would
seek to have the group's name
changed to a "less misleading"
one. The- society said University
Christian Association would be
in appropriate since Unitarians,
Roman Catholics, and o t her
groups which consider themselves
Christian would not be included.
However, Trumbore said, the
group felt that any hopes of com
promise between the Emerson So
ciety and the PSCA committee
might be hindered if such action
were taken at the present time.
Dean Schilling could not be
eached for comment yesterday.
FIVE CENTS