PAGE WO AIM Will Consider CE to Give .. . . G • • R eport On lying Dorm Trophy The A..sociatioit of Independent Men Board of Governors Forking. will consider a plan to authorize the awarding of an annual The Department of Civil Engi- t "outstanding living enit" trophy at a meeting at 7 p.m. to nering report on campus parkingj night in 203 Hetzel Union Building. ,conditions will be completed! , "soon" and will be submitted to; The ay. - aid will Ibe presented to the outstanding mare the administration near the midi independent undergraduate resi-'dle of December. dente hall units. The department is currently Under the ProPosaLs , a commit" conducting a study of parking; tee composed of three represen-.conditions under the direction ofj tatives from the AIM Board of Galvin G. Reen, professor of civil' Governors, two counselor co-' • ordinators and a representative: engmeering. from the dean of men's office The report, similar to that , would be formed to carry out the which was recently done on the awarding of the trophy to the condition of campus walks, will residence unit. :consist of recommendations that The unit with the highest ;would, in the opinion of the de number of points, as determined . partrnent, alleviate many of the; by a point system. would win narking and traffic conditions on , the trophy and hold it for one campus. year, or until a successor •is The Hetzel 1 Union Building named. parking lot is one of the areas Points for the award would be:under consideration. Last year, classified in the five categories'both students and faculty felt of scholarship, group activities, there should be a Pollack Road evaluation, individual activities,entrance into the parking lot. This and penalties. ;area currently has only one en- All -male independent under- trance —on Shortlidge Road. It graduate residence hall units on serves as both entrance and exit. the campus would be eligible to , Reen said he thinks every park corr4:kete. ing area should have both an Information would have to be:entrance and an exit but made turned in at the HUB desk no no comment on the proposed Pol later than 10 p.m. on April 15. 'lock Road entrance. The award would be con- : Students have made their own (erred io the counselor and recommendations as to what president of the winning unit would best ease present campus at the annual AIM banquet. ' The board also will hear re-! narking conditions. These recom ports from the Orientation Weektmendations were given to Robert Committee and the Indie WeekjG. Bernreuter, special assistant to Committee. ,the president for student affairs, Persons .vill be appointed to the' who in turn gave them to the AIM Judicial Board of Review. civil engineering personnel -eon !ducting the survey. These recom !mendations are being coordinat- P• • . itt Ticket Sale ied into the study, according to tßeen. Senate Unit Will Hear ZBT Appeal The Senate Sulse.ornmittee on Student Affairs w.ll meet today to hear an appeal by Zeta Beta Tau on the• 16-week social pro bation penalty perommended for the fraternity by the Interfrater ndy Council Board of Control. The subcommittee will meet at 11 a.m. to make a final decision on the probation_ The Board of Control's derision Will receive a "thorough review" by the subcommittee. Dean of Men Frank J. Simes said yester day. The board recommended pro bation for Zeta Beta Tau. effec tive immediately until the mid dle of next semester, because the fraternity had women guests in the house Saturday night when the house was not approved by the office of the dean of men. A house on social protsation is not permitted to entertain women guests at any social function for the duration of the probation. Zeta Beta Tau appeale.l the de cision on the grounds that th penalty was - far too set-ere under the circumstances." The decision of the board was in the form of a recommenda tion to the subcommittee, and the actual invoking of the pro bation will depend on today's Simes said since an appeal has been made, all of the facts of the case will b thoroughly reviewed by the subcommittee. Companies Suppor Fertilizer Research Thtee commerc.ial companies engaged :n the manufacture of urea-form compounds used in ler-. Lauer mixes for lawns are sup porting research on thesz corn pounds in the College of Agricul ture. The companies. du Pont de Ilmnoun:, Borden and Nitro-Form Agriculture Chemical. each have given $lOOO for the work. Dr. H B. Musser, professor of agronum, is in charge of the re search 3 Vacancies Reported On MI Student Council The Mineral Industries Council has reported one sophomore and two senior vacancies. Persons interested in applying for the posittow: may contact George Mater at AD 7-7881. WMAJ Programs INED S USD A Y . Sign Ocs _ Montt iekic Stow Kiwi. int Irberolveaa lie , sumg Sian. . Nem C te elude 010 _ E:3: . 0 :30 0:43 10:00 10:03 /110 1119/ 11:1'0 _ Swap Shoe; Musk .far Ltateautg Qe.... for a Day lEEE MME Weri4 News Afteremou r 111, woe „L. lunar to. Latrives Newt and Illariet Report Sport& SPecial Millie - - Lees! Pnitoa Le,orma. Jr. _ Iliusar for Liatroirat MCI School rrorrsim far List•rutt t razars",3 'I ZS 135 ...--- SWI ___.......--- 0 :fa 1/ :IS 11 a* le sod le :el Caturus Ne...e Wptillb 311wkie Lmteutar Dr. Sbori:er .11-1:14,1111 •• ************* •••••••• . Begins Today I ..I can't say that any of the ! recommendations by the students: • ;are unreasonable," he said. Tickets for the Lion-University: of Pittsburgh football game willzo i 'Dance' Tickets go on sale at 8:15 a.m. today at: the ll. i ticket office in Recreation Hall on Sale Today Edward M. Czekaj. ticket man-i A total of 250 tickets will go onl ;ages, said the office has receivedtsale to non-students at 9 a.m. to-' ;1000 sideline tickets priced at s•l'day for the Dancers of India pro each and another 1000 end-zone grant. scheduled for 8:30 p.m_ tickets priced at $2.50 each. ThelSaturday in Schwab Auditorium. office will be open from 8: 15 a.m.! Tickets will be sold from 9 a.m. until noon and from 1:00 to 4:30;to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. to ip.m. weekdays. day and tomorrow. The cost is A large number of tickets farisl.2s each. [the Lion-Holy Cross g am e s un re- The 1000 tickets made available main on sale at the ticket office. to students at 1 p.m. Monday were `Czeltaj said. Sales will close at; gone by 4 p.m. yesterday. If any 4:30 p.m. Thursday. tickets remain from the sale. they will be available to students from • 9 a.m. to noon and from - 1 to 5 iProf Joins Committee p.m. Friday. George M. Dusinberre. profes- , i sor of mechanical engineering. Seminar to Hear Prof has been appointed to the Heat , Erwin R. Schmerlin ,,, , assistant :Transfer Conference Plan n i n g professor of electrical engineer- ICommittee, a joint policy making‘ing, will speak to the computer i committee of the American So-' applications seminar at 4:10 today !ciety of Mechanical Engineers and in 209 Willard on "Reduction of 'the American Institute of Chemi- lonospheric Data by Matrix In cal Engineers. . version." liiEiciiE THE DA II Y COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PEN NSYI VAN b. Perkins Says U. S. Must Build Defense Dr. Dexter Perkins, chairman of the Harvard Foundation for Advanced Study and Research, said last night Americans must tighten their belts to build up national defense and wait for either a Russian attack or a weakening from the inside in the Soviet Union. Perkins said Americans must be prepared to make the great sacrifices needed to build up our national defense and put American society." We mu s t us in the best bargaining position' , "cleanse ourselves of our white in the cold war. ' man arrogance," he said. President Dwight D.-Eisenhow-i nistic experiment in the Orient. e The success of the commu er told the nation of the measures i which must be taken to make us, strong, but, Perkins maintamed,; Perkins noted that our freedom! mean much "less in the Orient' "did not say it would cost money." Perkins predicted, with sornel besides the industrial develop. Iment offered by communism. reservations, that Russia will suf-' fer more and more from internal tensions, The intelligentsia and the man-' agerial classes within Russia and: the peoples in the satellite, he said, have been alienated to some de gree, thus creating tensions and instability in the regime. The result of this, he said, would probably be Soviet internal weak ness coupled with a stronger for eign policy—including military adventures—to distract attention at home. Perkins stressed above all else the "maintenance of our physical power," for we "cannot be sure Russia will not invoke" its power ful new weapons. The Russians have the advan tage here, Perkins held. "They can sweat it out of their people," he said, but Americans will fight infringements on their rights in this matter. He paralleled our position to that of Britain in the 19305. While the British refused to make sacri-I fices and began to cut their dea., fense in the 19305, Perkins re-, called, Hitler began his march through Europe. Then, in desperation, Britain committed herself to the defense of Poland, he said; and got herself into a war at a very inopportune time. The Soviets, like Hitler, Per kins said, can spread the net of communism until we,' like Brit ain in the 19305, may be forced into a position where we "will lose our heads." Perkins named two further dis advantages we face in a contest with Russia: our decentralized educational set-up and the slow ness of decision inherent in the democratic system. While we cannot centralize and dictate to education as Russia has, he said, we can produce a `great er interest" in science, "particular ly basic science." Other barriers to American vic tory in the cold war which Per kins named are: • Our association with the colon ial powers in our dealings in the Middle East. •The "color question," which, he said, is "the Achilles heel of WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 1957 By DAVE FINEMAN CATIIAUM Now - 2:01, 3:53, 5:45, 7:31, 9:31 P " — ELVIS PRESLEY 40- AMS br, Ditni:C;S:r.ttt tar °Use 12fL7-1 Rock 420 • Cmoneont •A: ... • * NITTANY Now - Doors Open 6:45 p.m. "French and Frisky! Makes 'The Moon Is Blue' look like an Elsie story!"—N. Y. Times opOE P ARIS DANIEL GELIN DANY ROBIN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers