PA& TWO AIM Junks 'Direct Voting/ * Substitute Representative Plan orl rovers^ In a two hoar and forty minute meeting punctuated by procedural questions, the! Association of Independent Men Board of Governors voted. 20-6, against Including a “di rected vote" clause in their newly revised constitution. The new constitution, minus the voting clause and with a few minor changes, was ' “ jthen approved unanimously. i i • I If approved, the voting clause IVAA| nA I* I .would have forbad the AIM pres * ’'Vt ■ ■ 'id<*nt to vote in direct opposition to a stated policy of the board, ■at an All-University Cabinet! .meeting. j ) Immediately following the de-i ciiion on directed voting, the board defeated a motion by James! Goodwin to delete the phrase, c< , , .. , . . stating the president shall repre-; , j’ 1 * I Wl i‘. P n rt i !>e, l,V^K V iK sent AIM on Cabinet. Goodwini Ann Kerstetter made the motion because Ave^t^o r the president would not, charged with murder and con-, r^P resr r nt j n S the board if he. ceaiment of the death of an il-j™ led agairtst the boams wishes.; legitimate child. hypocritical, he. Miss Kerstetter will appear be-i s «: .. fore Justice of the Peace Guy time, Thomas, Mills on a charge of murda-ing: sh,els : v r est £alls representative, her new-born baby Oct. 2 and; m °j that it the president ve-| placing it in a shallow grave be-* oed 3 hoard policy on a certain hind Nittany Lion Inn. j' ssue - and the board overrode the; The woman has been confined ve t° with a two-thirds majority,! in Centre County jail. Bellefonte, the president should not sit on since last Thursday. She was ap-iCabinet when that issue was be firehended by state police at the : ‘ n K discussed. Instead. Shiels nn where she worked as a salad, said the president should appoint girl in the kitchen. la member of the majority opinion. Mills said the hearing tomorrow to sit on Cabinet. ! will be to determine if there is Morgan ruled the motion out! enough evidence against Miss,of order. Karstetler to bring the case before; William B. Crafts, assistant county "court j to the dean of men in charge The Slate College woman was; of independent affairs, started apprehended five days after the the ball rolling aoainsi a di body of the male infant was dis-j reeled vote terming it a "shac covered lying on the ground be-' kle.” No group on campus has hind the Inn by Waiter Stine, a: this type of clause, he said, dishwasher, of Port Matilda.! and if approved, it would put Police theorized that the bodyi the board "in a mighty funny was dragged from its crude grave: position." hy_ a small animal. j AIM president John Morgan . Police said further investigation backed up Crafts’ opinion. Mor mto the case is being postponed | ean to ld board members he had until after todays hearing. They: beard many opinions from adrr.in said the complete autopsy report jstrative and political science fac has pot yet been received from ulty members calling any such Si4oT I r.u, H oisr n 5. ’S: "gif ’ g*Sf “»■»* » «•“ th? p!oS." JfTSSidXS o,u;~ c.m , .'the president in an inflexible oo- Police said they do not know s j t j on on Cabinet, unable to Testify In Baby Case yet whether the infant was killed:iu ar , n „ ~' , before it was buried or whelher;* a f ”?* it was buried alive. A trooper mto , the 8? tra-gjs saCK sswarfs .».iline otiUome of Ihe hearing. w . .. *”8 that he would have to justify Young GOP s to Hear (any actions he would taktik and Mid-East Policy Talk peTchment be SubjeCt ® im ' The Young Republican Club Taking a different tack. Good* will meet at 7 tonight in 212 win supported the proposal Hetzel Union. saying it would uphold the A speaker from Jordan will! principle of a representative de taik on “The Effect of the United mocracy. "AIM Is supposed to States' Middle East Foreign Pol-, deal with the independent icy." ! man," he said, "and this group Rade Convicted of Forgery; Committed to Psych Hospital Centre County Court has ordered Stephen Rade. former 6ophomore from Philadelphia, to be committed to a psychi atric hospital after he and an accomplice were convicted yesterday on a forgery charge. Rade and Stephen Schulman, also of Philadelphia but not a student, pleaded guilty before,' Judge William W. Litke to forg-' del Phia Psychiatric Hospital at ing and passing about 10 checks' of their P arents ' ; worth $l5 each in the State Col- „“ lk * i e ,*? c ? ma L ionS J?- v v : i j _rx . eral psychiatrists showed that lege area during October. , both Rade and Schulman had Rade was charged with aiding/'anti-social behavior patterns." and abetting forgery and violating,The judge said the two will be the fircat ms code by filing identi- confined to the institution for a fication numbers from a pistoL;“substantially long period of Schulman was charged with forg-; time." cry- I Litke said Rade and Schulman Litke ruled the sentences of the,will be confined subject to cor.-' youths be deferred and that the trol and further orders of the two be committed to the Phila- : court. E UROPE tmmmmt «*s| —Tt l<. *«*« *• utoft s«ium roots 20 >■<<»?■ <»*i ci. fwriwA C«tf PRINTING Letterpress • Offset Commercial Printing SSL E. College AD B-5734 THE OAIIY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA By LARRY JACOBSON -Attention All Penn State students planning to go to tHe Berks County Alumni Dance contact Jeanette Spangler at Ext. 3444, and you’ll save s2.'on tickets. The annual semi-formal Christmas Dance will be held at the Reading Country Club on Decem ber 27, 1957. , (AIM) is supposed to be a ' sounding board for the inde . pendent man's opinion.** j The president does not sit on i Cabinet as an individual, he '[Claimed, but rather as the repre sentative of all independent men. If the president does not vote according to the board's wishes, he is breaking down all commun ication channels which good stu ‘ dent government should strive to maintain, he said. 1 Goodwin noted that the AIM • president could use the power { of veto to override a board's policy statement. "Then if the j board overrides that veto (two ■ thirds majority needed), it • means that two thirds of the I members feel strongly enough i about that certain issue to want j it expressed on Cabinet," he. i said. ' Carl Smith, West Halls Coun cil president, trying to discredit the “inflexible” claim, said if something comes up on Cabinet ithat the board has not discussed, 'the president is free to vote as he ■ wishes. In addition, he said, the board could always give the pres ident a “carte blanche", or free I choice. Student Fined For Speeding James Noll, fourth semester sophomore in electrical engineer ing from Harrisburg, was fined $l5 Tuesday for speeding. i Justice of the Peace Guy B. i Mills said Noll was charged with [speeding on South Atherton Street .about 2:30 a.m. Nov. 23. i Mills said the student had ques tioned the fact that he was speed ing. Noll also contended that he was not followed by a patrolman the required distance of one fourth of a mile. Mills said. But Mills said a police report; showed Noll was followed the proper distance before he was stopped. Noll’s fine was $lO for speed- 1 ing and S 5 for costs. *CATHAUM Now - 1:15, 3:18, 5:21, 7:24, 3:30 Gene Kelly - Mitii Gaynor Kay Kendall "LES GIRLS" FRIDAY and SATURDAY Tumultuous Scenes' “Helen of Troy” Cinema Scope - Color FRIDAY AT MIDNIGHT aan Soon - Great "Sayonara" ¥ NITTANY Now - Doors Open 6:4S Terrifying! “Night Runner” Colleen Miller FRIDAY and SATURDAY Full of Belly-Laffs! “Dig That Uranium” Leo Gorcoy - Hunts Hall Behind the ROTC Question First Heard in 1931 By PAT EVANS j Twelfth of a Series Present moves for voluntary ROTC are not the first— in 1931 a survey of 211 male students by the College Student | Council, predecessor to All-University Cabinet, showed that two of three students favored voluntary election of basic [ROTC. The Daily Collegian back in 1931 was campaigning vigor ously for a change in the ROTC ‘ program. Ridge Riley, now execu- could elect a chemical warfare tive secretary of the Alumni As- course for some of hi* military sociation, was then Collegian edi- work credits. A liberal arts ma jtor and one of the Collegian re- jor might choose a course in porters writing ROTC articles was international law and relations. Ralph D. Hetzel Jr., son of Presi-’ a Trustee report explaining the dent Ralph Dorn Hetzel. j Board's action said: The Board of Trustees in Janu-; ‘’There has been a growing feel ary 1932 considered the Student 1 ing for some years that the pres i Council’s resolution and a report 1 ent course in military training [by a board committee'which had; fails to prepare the student ade studied the ROTC question. Th? quately for the part he will be [Collegian described the resulting!called upon to play should the action: I emergency of national defense “The . knell of compulsory [arise.” mUilary drill here was sounded ; In a story printed Jan. 22, 1932, when the Board of, Trustees ... jthe Collegian said, “Officers of the authorized College officials io I national War Department will be set up a more modern program [consulted in formulating the of training in national defense." [courses. The plan must be ap- Tentative plans in the new pro- proved in its details by the Board gram approved by the board were!of Trustees before it is put into to permit a student to substitute'action.” courses relevant to his course of What happened to the Trustees' study for the compulsory drill and plan will be discussed in another accompanying tactics. The sug- article, gested program was described as similar to one adopted at the Uni-' versity of Minnesota. j Students, under the proposed; Trustee plan, could elect courses' concerned with various phases of, national defense, instead of spend-- ing actual drill all the time de-i voted to military instruction. ! With the plan, expected to go i into effect with the fall semes- i ter in 1933. a chemistry major ; *i LISTEN TO WMAJ j 1450 on your dial FromAto on your Chrisfma Lfst The gift most likely to succeed Here is the gift most likely to be used and appreciated for years to come by anyone on your Christmas list Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary is required or recommended by the country’s leading schools and colleges. The best because it’s a Jfemom-Webster. $5 plain; ?6 thumb-indexed. De luxe gift bindings $7.50 to $12.60. Come in and let us show you a copy. KEELERS The University Booh ;5 ? » v g | 3 1 ‘JChftSdiM THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1957 Feat 2:22, 4:10. 5:58, 7:46, 9:37 Paramount Priftnt* f DINA ANDREWS 1 r LINDA DARNELL % ?SIERiINGHAW.g L «**»»•' feats* News • Cartoon w Just-calling to remind YOU to SHOP EARLY! Store