Today's Far Warme Partly Clo VOL. 58, No. 85 Code Said ipled Voting Chang: Unprin , Lion party; P, said last l it believe the !lections Com- William UN& clique - chairma night he does n All-University a ate Wednes day night's revision cf the Elections Code. The revision states in part that a party membership card is bind ing for an entire semester. Thus a student could not resign from one :party_ to join" another. inittee can enf said this revision is based on an undemocratic prin -eiple,- he said - . a. student should be free' to' choose his organize 'lion. . A test case, • if l.it comes up, O'Neill said, may show the meas 7 lire to be 'unprincipled - and un enforceable.-- . _ Although the -revision -to the , Elections Code will - go into effect immediately, it will no t.become a permanent part of the code un less it is approved byAll-Univee sity Cabinet. The revision will be presented to _Cabinet - at next ThUrsday's meeting.- • "Under the • revision, students :of any other politiCal affiliation ,who register in University party . af Sunday's meeting a pre =requisite to Noting—cannot re sume their original affiliation --at any time during this - semes ler. . John IrAngelo, University party chairman, said ,in, an interview, 9. definitely think Lion party is going to try 'to gain control of University party again" Sunday night.", D'Angelo said he is in favor of the Elections Code revision, because it eliminates a possibility that students of 'one political af filiation woud join another party, put their associates into the party offices and then re-affiliate with their original party. Lion Parry members are now trying to take over University party. D'Angelo said , because they realize that Lion Party is deteriorating and they are using University party, as a ve hicle to regain their declining • political power:* O'Neill said it's "ridiculous" tto assume that Lion party is de teriorating. He declined to com ment on the rest of D'Angelo's accusations. Lion's Head, Mercury Rise - The Nittany Lion emerged from his den this morning sporting a bump on his head that defied even the most competent phre nologists. , The Lion; accounting for the _bump, said, "I 7tv a s so elated _this morning that I jumped out of • bed - and 'hit rriy bead on the ceil- . `ing= of my den_ "'Why was I ao happy? Well sir, today, for the first time since Saturday, I am able to pre dict that the temperature will actually rise above the freezing mark-35 de grees to be exact. Now ain't that somethin' to bump your head about?" Newnian Club :. Will Hold - .Sweetheart Ball Tonight • The Newman Club will hold its :annual Swetheart Ball at 8 to night in the , church hall. Music will be furnished by a combo. Admission is by member ship card and twenty-five -cents or fifty cents. It - Will be a dress :up event with refreshments served. - ~,,„ ...,, . : or ir k, Ei tit t g ,: : ....",..„-,...;,:. , t! STATE COLLEGE. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 14. 1958 —Daily Collegian photo by George Harrison SALES BY SKl—Frederick Smith (left), senior in dairy science from - Norristown, buys a ticket to a skiing movie shown last night by the Outing Club. Selling the tickets are Phillip Simonski, junior in forestry from Perkasie, and Millicent Withrow, sopho more in home economics from Riverdale, Md. Reid Urges Peace in Racial Problems The road to racial peaCe'is - a - long one—one that - bears watching if that which is moral and ethical is to come to life; and the world has to move on this road or in the opposite direction, warned Dr. Ira De A. Reid at the fifth annual Brotherhood Banquet. Reid referred to the four famous ancient roads of Damas- cus, Jerusalem, Jericho and Irasthmus because of their ability to survive the many hardships and attacks against them. The road to peace is not one of these ancient roads, but a combination of all four, he said Wednesday. Mankind's bitterest struggles are not of wars but of national ism, religion, race and economics, Reid said, and nationalistic and economic problems have tended to be solved in the course of years, while those of religion and race still remain. We live in a sort of armistice with these two problems. If Europeans hid not moved fiom one country to another, many problems would not have arisen. But in a world of com munication, isolationism is a road which, leads to artificial peace, he said. . The question which is in the minds of everyone today, Reid Review of Wcilker Article: Defeat 'Faculty Conservatism' Among , the suggestions for modernizing 'scientific educa tion listed by President Eric A. Walker in a recent article is a plea for education research in an attempt to "overcome the faculty conservatism that keeps us from increasing the aciericy cf the leachers." In an article -iu "Brainpower Quest," a book . published by the Macmillan Company, Walker called this "an obligation" not on ly, "to ourselves and to our effort to keep our higher-education sys tem healthy, but it is also an obli gation we have to those whom we serve." - Walker analyzed the problem of scientific' education as the need to develop the -scientist engineer-lerhnirian team," not only as a scientific problem but FOR A BETTER PENN STATE By CATHY FLECK said, is "how to deal with peace in such a way that it can be achieved?" He said the United States has achieved this peace partially through the introduction of all peoples into the armed forces: the various labor acts which dealt away with discrimination in job fields, and the Supreme Court de cisions. Reid said that he feels that unless the U.S. is able to im plement these measures into peo ple's daily lives, the road traveled since the Civil War may be destroyed. Reid cited the University be cause of its equality of oppor tunity for everyone regardless of race and religion. He said since the University has achieved this equality it should strive to keep it. Now youth must be given a chance to walk these roads to peace, he said. as a part of U.S. culture. Sci entific people, he said, have re sponsibilities in both of these aspects of their - field—"to un derstand the theory of their work" and to "take a second look at what they are doing." The first of these responsibili ties, Walker said, is an outgrowth of the changing methods in sci ence. The trial and error method is becoming- less important, he said, and in its place science is developing the method of "theory . . . first and experimentation later." The second responsibility is the result of the increasing im pact of science on society. Walk er said, whereby the engineers and scientists "are changing the face of the earth and are re vising our social and economic systems." Therefore, he said, "it is proper for society" to demand of them "a sense of social responsibility." oUrgiatt Tunisian President Threatens War TUNIS, Feb. 13 (I}—President Habib Bourguiba declared today, "We are ready to make war for Bizerte." But he held open the door to mediation by the United States of Tunisia's quarrel with France. "The President also suggested in a broadcast to his tense nation that, while he is deter mined 15,000 French troops sta tioned in Tunisia must go, the big French naval base at Bizerte might still be used by the North Atlantic Treaty powers. That base and French army _garrisons are blockaded. Jittery Tunisian civilians and national guardsmen, patroling with light arms. - manned roadblocks to prevent the movement of French troops. They threatened to fire on any French ships at tempting to enter or leave Bizerte. Bourguiba's blue eyes flashed as he spoke on this sixth day of a crisis brought on by a French air raid on the frontier village of Sakiet Sidi Youssef. Tuinsia put the toll at 68 men, women and- children killed, 84 wounded and 10 not accounted for. The French said the raid was to punish Algerian rebels who had fired on French planes from their border hideouts in Tuni sia. But several diplomats, in eluding U. S. Ambassador G. Lewis Jones. are reported to have confirmed that there were heavy civilian casualties. Using international reaction to the bombing as a springboard, Bourguiba has been trying once again to force withdrawal of French trocips who remained in the country when France recog nized Tunisian independence nearly two years ago. The trouble began when French soldiers entered the sovereign country of Tunisia,• allegedly in pursuit of Algerian rebels. The Tunisian government protested the action to the UN. Tunisia is an ex-French colony and is located between Algeria and Libya. Gym Meet Tickets Remain on Sale Tickets are available at the ticket office in Recreation Hall for the Eastern Intercollegiate Gymnastic League individual championships. The championships will be held March 7 and 8 at Rec Hall. Tick ets are $1 for reserved balcony seats and 50 cents for general ad mission. The ticket office is open from X8:15 a• m• to noon and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. weekdays and from 8:15 a.m. Ito noon Saturdays. - Walker's trichotomy of the sci entist-engineer-technician team gives a picture of the modern Sci entific method. As he describes it, "the scientist deals with ideas; he tries to find out 'why' and to fit nature's facts into a logical equation or theory," although he "may not produce immediate tan-1 gible results." The engineers. Walker said, make up the creative element which takes basic scientific dis coveries and turns them into "ideas, plans, and blueprints which can fin- human needs. "The technician." Walker said, "must be an intelligent follower able to carry out accurately and completely the directions he re ceives from the scientist or engi neer." The technician, -Walker indi cated, turns the ideas - , - plans and Tendof the engineer into end products ready for human consumption and use. Now This Is Fair? See Page 4 Exec Board Enlargement Is Proposed The University"will move Mon day to increase the elected mem bers of the Board of Trustees executive committee from seven to nine and to change the proce dure for electing alumni mem bers of the board. A petition will be presented in Centre County court Monday to ask approval of an amendment to the University charter to effect the changes. If the court approves the peti tion it will go to the State Coun cil of Education at Harrisburg for approval and then back to the court for final disposition. Members of the executive com mittee are chosen by ballot at the annual meeting of the board. The two ex-officio members of the board are not affected by the ' proposed amendment. The ex officio members are the president of the corporation, who is also president of the board and chair man of the executive committee, and the president of the Univer sity, who is the recording secre tary for the board and for the ex ecutive committee. The alumni have nine repre sentatives on the board. Three are elected each year for three year terms. Under the amendment, alumni will vote for trustees one year after graduation or one year after having left, instead of three years as is done now. Alumni will be required to be members of the Alumni Associa tion or contributors to the Alum ni Fund to qualify for the offi cial mailing list. This requirement was proposed because of the. growing cost of mailing separate nomination and election ballots to 43.000 alumni, only 20 per cent of whom reply. Ballots will be made available to other alumni upon request. To encourage their participation an application form will be print ed in The Penn Stater which is mailed four times annually to all alumni. 2 Strict Campuses Issued by WSGA The Women's Student Govern ment Association Judicial Board issued a strict week campus Tues day to a coed who did not observe a lenient weekend campus. The woman received the leni ent campus Feb. 4 for lateness and was to take the penalty last weekend. The board issued a strict week end campus to a coed who re turned a day early to campus and did not sign in. Instead, she stayed overnight with a friend in another residence hall. The board also issued one o'clock removal and 30 black marks. Circa Staff to Accept Original Literary-Work Circa literary magazine is ac cepting manuscripts at the Hetzel Union desk. Poetry, fiction and prose on de scriptive or expository material is acceptable. Both students and faculty may contribute or obtain further information by calling I Ruth Billig, extension 470 or Ro- bert Nurock, ADams 8-1053. • FIVE CENTS