Today's Fore Cloudy, Warmer VOL. 59. No. 84 Open I To Be i By Tru Editorial on i A Daily Collej for open meeting the agenda for t gian request [3 will be on re next ses : of Trustees, ne 6. sion of the Board scheduled for Jui i read at the : f the board. ::d upon then been received >enda, accord , assistant sec- The request was Jan. 23 meeting c But it was not act because it had not in time for the ag ing to C. S. Wyand, retary of the beard, veek to Col i>ri Franklin, •ur proposal to the Board next meeting. Ear June 6, In a letter this ’ legian Editor Robi Wyand said. will be submitted of Trustees at the now scheduled i 1959." Board President James B. Long and Gov. David L. Lawrence, a member of the board, both have come out in favor of opening the trustees meetings to the public and the press. State Rep. Joseph P. Ujobai (R.-Chester) and House Majority Leader Stephen McCann (D.-Greene) last week expressed support for possible state legisla tion to open the meetings. Franklin’s letter to the board specifically asked v open meetings of all sessions of the full board and of the executive committee. It said: “I am certain that no group realizes more fully than the Penn State Board of 'Trustees the tre mendous problems the University faces in the next 12 years. "To meet these problems, Penn State must make the best pos sible use of every resource at its command. These resources should, include the utmost co operation and understanding of Penn State alumni, faculty, staff and students, and of the people of Pennsylvania. "I am sure you feel, as we do, that these groups should be inter ested in and fully informed on Penn State’s educational and physical development, its finances, needs and overall plans—in short, in the policies determined by the Board of Trustees. "We firmly believe that full press coverage of board meetings will stimulate an increased public interest in and understanding of the University which is vital to Penn State’s future. Rushing Rules Intact For New Freshmen The Interfraternity Council Board of Control yesterday warned fraternity members that the deferred rushing rules which applied the first semester will be intact for new students this semester. Board Chairman Ronald Siders said all the rules which| applied to first semester students in the fall will apply, to first semester students even though fraternity rushing is being held for the second semester men. Fraternity men will not be per mitted to enter this men’s resi dence halls from 7 b.m. to 7 a.m. for any reason, Sitters said. This includes men who ' wish to rush second semester students. Fraternity men mitted in the men 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. i first and second i upperclass studen: than one fraternil lime may visit a i student, however. First semester prohibited from visi ises or entering a Siders said. Siders also said ruled that all adverl (Unlbgi Respect Own Beliefs, Dr. Shapiro Advises card ired •tees barger, chaplain to the University. Shapiro, national director of the Hillel Foundations, spoke a't the Brotherhood Banquet last night in the HUB ballroom. The Christian who is a Christian and the Jew who is a Jew have the greatest chance te. attain real brotherhood, said Dr. Judah J. Shapiro last night at the sixth annual Brotherhood Banquet. Speaking on “The Meaning of Pluralism in American Cloudy, Warmer Weather Expected A series of storm systems stretching from the Great Lakes to the Lower Mississippi Valley and the northward movement of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico will cause rain for most of the Eastern sections of the nation to day. The rain will be followed by much colder weather and a few mow flurries tomorrow morning. The forecast for today and to light is cloudy, windy, and warm er. There will be a high near 50 his afternoon with a low tonight >f 40. ing fraternity parties or mixers must specifically invite only stu dents second semester and above. The board also outlined the proper procedure for registering and tagging freshmen Friday and Saturday nights. The freshmen must be identified in some way, Siders said, and no freshman un der 21 years of age may be served or drink any intoxicating bever ages. will be per a units from 3 rush both emesier and ;s. No more y man at a irst semester If freshmen sign a guest regis ter and mark their semester standing, the fraternity is ab solved of blame if the student has falsified his semester "Standing in order to drink alcoholic bev erages, Siders said. Proper “door duty” must also be maintained to greet guests on both Friday and Saturday, he said. students are ;ing the prem ly fraternity. he board has ising concern- STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 13, 1959 By CAROL BLAKESLEE —Joel Myers . Collegian Forecaster FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Society,” the national director of the B’nai B’rith Hillel Founda tions, said that the members of each faith must have self-respect for their own religion to live in a true Judeo-Christian society. “The beauty of religion is that it is something within you which can illuminate problems,” he said. “It is not a matter of the church alone.” Shapiro advised that it is time to re-establish and take action on what we individually be lieve. In America, he said, most groups spend time trying to prove they are not “different.” This has re sulted from a general hostility to newcomers in the 19th century. "It is not correct to say that absorption into pur cultures has resulted from great hospitality,” he said. As a result, imigrants were eager to “throw off their differences to gain acceptance.” This is a natural process, he said, for “when people are very dissimilar they seek to be alike.” He asked, however, have Amer icans' not become so much alike that they should not depart a little from this likeness so that each can stand more for his group’s rights. Hs said that Americans have become separated from the cul tural differences of they (Continued on page five) Must Seek Charter Cabinet Drops CPA By DENNY MALICK The Central Promotion Agency will have to become sanctioned by the University Senate Subcommittee on Or ganizations if it wishes to operate in the future. All-University Cabinet last night eliminated the agency as one of its standing committees, thus making it an independent organ ization which requires Senate recognition to operate. After a Student Encampment recommendation last semester, The executive assistant to the secretary-general of the United Nations, Dr. Andrew W. Cordier, will lecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday in 121 Sparks. | Cordier’s lecture is entitled “The~United Nations in a Revolutionary World,” and is co-sponsored by the Graduate School Lecture Series and the Committee on International Understanding. , 1 Since his appointment to that position in 1946, Cordier has been responsible for coordinat ing United Nations activities and programs, including the or ganization and direction oi the General Assembly and head quarters direction of political missions. | Cordier, who has been principal adviser to all the presidents of the United Nations General As sembly, was graduated from Manchester College, North Man chester, Ind., and he received master of arts and doctor of phil osophy degrees from the Univer sity of Chicago. He also studied for a year at the Graduate Insti tute of International Studies in Geneva. From 1927 to 1944 he served as chairman of the department of history and political science at Manchester College and from 1929 to 1944 he served as lec turer in social sciences for the Extension Division 'of Indiana University. Between 1928 and 1941 he trav eled extensively, making surveys of the crises in the Sundentenland, Danzig, and the Chaco. After leaving Manchester Col lege in 1944, Cordier served for two years in the State Depart ment as an expert on interna tional security. As technical expert on the U.S. Delegation at the United Nations Conference in San Francisco, he was adviser to the late Sen. Vandenberg. In 1945, he was sent to London by the State Department to assist in setting up the United Nations. In June he was designated as spe cial representative of the secre tary-general to Mount Scopus. Television Puppet Show To Originate on Campus A puppet show will highlight WFBG’s weekly program, “Key to the Cupboard,” tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. The half-hour program, a pre sentation of the University, will originate from the campus studios. An added feature of the show will be the presence of a “live” audi ence of 13 State College children. Canoe Class to Be Held For students who signed up for Outing Club canoe instruction,' the class will be held at 1 p.m.! tomorrow instead of 10 a.m. • It is open to Outing Club mem bers only. CPA Director Emanuel Green berg drew up a constitution with out which the agency had oper ated for its five years of exist ence. Greenberg, presenting the con stitution to Cabinet last night, was unable to answer many of the questions from Cabinet mem bers as to the value of the agency. Greenberg said that lack of or ganization has caused much in efficiency in CPA’s operation. He felt that the constitution would give the director and Jus staff more power to make it more suc cessful. Greenberg said CPA did “about” $3OO business last year. tut Be Given Executive Boy's Body Found After 2-Doy Hunt The 49-hour search for the body of Terry Boal ended yester day on a muddy, half-submerged island in Bald Eagle Creek. Lee Fetzer Jr., of Bellefonte, one of three in a motor boat combing the creek, came upon the body at 2:20 p.m. yesterday on the island at the Nevin Pighetti [farm, 2M> miles northeast of jMilesburg, near Curtin. i The discovery ended the ex tensive search efforts begun when the 5-year-old youth was swept into a storm sewer in Bellefonte shortly after noon on Tuesday. Searchers yesterday resorted to using eraDpling hooks to probe the waters of Soring Creek at McCov below Bellefonte. F'remen. Explorer Scouts and other volunteers—more than 100 persons—participated in the wide spread search, policing virtually everv foot of Spring and Bald Ea«le Creeks. It was the oartv led bv Miles burg Fire Chief Phillip L. Wal lace that found the body about 7 miles north of Bellefonte The three men in the party were combing that area of the creek in a motor boat equipped with grappling hooks when Fetzer sighted the boy. The body was taken to Centre County Hospital in the Logan Fire Co. ambulance. Students Must Register For University Work All students who wish to work at the University this semester must register as soon as possible at the Student Employment Of fice. Those students who registered for work last semester must sign up again if they want to work this s°me-;ter. Handbook Staff Openings ! Applications for the business • staff of the Student Handbook are available at the Hetzel Union •desk, Jack Kendall, Engineering Student Council president, who moved that the agency be dis associated from Cabinet, said it iwould have more prestige as an independent group. Kendall questioned the value of Cabinet backing for CPA since with its support only a small amount of business was being done. Ross Lehman, one of CPA’s three faculty advisers, said he didn’t think the agency would :ever be successful. He pointed out that most of the larger organ izations never use the . service since people within their own groups handle the same work. Action On the Horizon See Page 4 FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers