Weather Fore Cloudy, Co Rain Like! VOL. 60. No. 27 Assem On (la A recommendation that class presidents appoint a class secretary-treasurer and that class vice presidents be elected by their class representatives on the Student Government Association Assembly, will be brought before the Assembly at 7:30 tonight in 215 Hetzel Union Building. Weekend To Feature Talent Show The musical shutv committee, of the United Nations Week- , end celebration will present its original production, "Get ting to Know You," from 8 to 10 p.m. Saturday in Schwab Auditorium. The Chapel Choir, directed by Mrs. Willa Taylor, professor of music and music education; Aca cia Quartet; he Thespian Chorus and many of the 210 international students enrolled at the University will participate in the program. Tickets, costing 50 cents each, will be available at the Hetzel Union desk starting today. Tickets may also be purchased at the door. The program, which is the last event in the University's UN Weekend celebration, is directed by Lynn Christy, associate profes tor of English composition. The acts and participants are as fol lows: Japanese dance—Miss Hisako Matsubara; Mexican songs—Adiel Belam; Indonesian songs—Mr. and Mrs.- Sumanti; Philippine dances—Marcelo Alvarez and E. Fabia; Israeli dances—Mr. and Mrs. Pour-El; Indian Dance—Mrs. Rona Saha; Scotland songs—Miss Elizabeth Munn; African songs —Jacob Dentu and Melton Clin ton; and Latin American songs and dances, done by members of the Latin American Project. Eight countries will be represent ed in this number. All the numbers In the pro , gram deal with the students' love and memories of their home countries. The musical show committee. which has as its chairman Madan Singh, graduate student in min ing engineering from India, is pre senting the program as a part of the national observance of World Refugee Year. AIM Fails to Approve ladle Merger By NICKI WOLFORD The Association of Indepen dent Men Board of Governors last night voted against ap proval of the proposed AIM- Leonides merger and sent it to a committee for study. Only four of the 34 member board voted to approve the mer ger._ ' Leonides approved the merger Monday night by a vote of 17 to 6. In proposing the motion for merger approval, parliamen tarian Carl Smith said lack of communication between the groups was the obvious reason for the merger. As an example of this poor communication, he cited the an- ~..,....7.,., 1 r 4 at ...;.-. - ,.. ti;; , . x . ;!. for ,k.,.„.,. ly to Hear Report s Officers Bill By CAROL BLAKESLEE The assembly will also hear the first reading of the proposed amendment to the SGA constitu tion which asks that the SGA I President chair the Assembly in-i stead of the vice president. For the recommendation to become an amendment it must be passed at three Assembly meetings. The first two read ings must be passed by a ma ' jority vote and the third by a two-thirds majority vote. Jean Van Tassel, chairman of the Reorganization Committee, ;will present the recommendation (concerning class officers to the Assembly. I Miss VanTa3sers committee was (asked at last week's Assembly ;meeting to further study a bill introduced by Campus party for !an amendment to the constitu lion The original bill suggested that a president, vice president and a treasurer be elected by Assembly provided for his class; each class: that each class presi dent hold one of the seats on and that each vice president be the president's official alter nate assemblyman. Miss Van Tassel's committee will suggest that each class advisory board draw up a list of students qualified to hold the vice presi dential position. The class mem bers who sit on Assembly would then elect a class vice president from the students on the list. Each class president's appoint ment of a secretary-treasurer would be subject to the approval, of his advisory board. In this way, Miss Van Tassel said, "a type of check-and- bal ance system would be set up." In other business, the assembly will hear reports from the Pep Club and the School Spirit work shop of the 1959 Student Encamp ment. Both will be given to Lan ney Dey,. senior in business ad ministration from Camden, Ohio. No Student Tickets Left For Concert All student tickets have been distributed for the concert by Leonard Rose, cellist, and Leon Fleisher, pianist. Less than 45 non-student tickets remain on sale at the Hetzel Union desk. The Artists Series program is to be held at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. Fleisher and Rose will perform works by Bach, Brahms and Beethoven. nual spring AIM-Leonides Award Banquet. He said not one pro posal about the banquet came from Leonides until one week before it was scheduled to take! place. He said many of the groups' Joint activities were carried out by AIM alone. Philip Haines, president of the Town Independent Men Council, speaking against the merger, said "We are a little premature in trying to make a decision since only 5 or 6 mem ber of the board have ever even sat in on a Leonides meet ing." Haines said he wanted definite proposals about how the new or ganization would be set up. Citing the average 2-hour AIM meet ing, Haines said since the group's ;business was just barely gotten lover in its present time allot- FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 22, 1959 Strike Injunction Remains Unsettled World at a Cc:nee ... Page Four PITTSBURGH (/P) A U.S. district judge ordered the record 99-day steel strike halted temporarily yesterday. But the strike rolled on as an appellate judge delayed execution of the Taft-Hartley edict. A stay of the order was granted until this morning. That meant no reopening of mills and pickets continued on duty. He said the Taft ,Hartley injunction would not be vine effective if the union asks a 'ull 3-membei third Circuit Couit ianel in Philadelphia for a fur .her stay pending formal hear ng of the union's appeal. —Collegian 'Pinto by Dave Tamil. IFC WORKSHOP SPEAKERS—Dr. Neal Reimer (upper left), Dr. Judith Leventman (upper right), Dr. Frank Sorauf (lower left) and Samuel Wherry spoke at fraternity houses last night as part of the Annual IFC Workshop program. Surprise Guest Slated for Rally A surprise speaker will appear at the "Beat Illinois" pep rally at 7:30 tonight in front of Old Main Most students will not recog nize him but they will know him when ll is introduced. Sever Toretti, assistant football coach, will also speak at the rally. Frank Pearson, senior in arts and letters from Ridley Park, will be master of ceremonies. The" cheerleaders plan to intro duce some new cheers to the crowd. Before the rally the Navy Band and the cheerleaders will parade around campus. ment, "just imagine what it would; be like if women sat on the board." He said AIM members wouldl not be interested in hearing about "housemothers teas and things." Frank Pearson, AIM vice president, said the merger would solve the problem which will arise with the new com munity living program. Stafford Friday proposed a sub stitute motion which would study the merger and bring back re ports both to AIM and Leonides. This motion was endorsed by the board. After endorsing the substitute motion, Smith said, "Two inde-1 pendent organizations are worth less. I only hope this committee will bring back to us the pur poses of the merger. We just can't pass it by." rgiatt Cloudy Skies, Rain Expected Today . _ Cloudy skies are likely to--con-court v•ould be settling in favor tinue for two and possibly three, of tne union one of the most im days. !portant terms of collective bar- Today will be cloudy and cooligaining " wjth rain probably beginning this) Judge Sorg reserved a decision afternoon. The high should be 53 on the reti oactivity issue. He said degrees. ihe did :o "at the request of all ti nu Ra e in tonight and cloud and y part skies of witom or iparties concerned.ll con- , - row as a storm system approaches! _David J. McDonald, USW presi this area. Tonight's low will begient, declined any comment on 46 degrees. the legal maneuvers. WSGA Travel The Women's Student Government Association Senate voted last night to give women an unlimited number of 1 a.m. traveling permissions. . The Senate approved changing the rule which states that women are allow - ed four 1 a.m, permissions- a semester when they travel more than 35!' , miles from the University. !mg permission for over a year. It was decided that freshmen as Jessie Janjigian, president of, well as upperelass women be aI ;WSGA, said that when, women lowed the unlimited permissions. wish to travel more than 35 miles T from campus and return on the hey will be allowed to take them they must receive per school, when freshman women except for the first four weeks of; same day mision from Dorothy Toklish, are required by Customs to re- ;chairman of WSGA Judicial main on campus. ißoard. This applies to the new ruling also, she said Senate members agreed that In other business Senate many girls go away from cam- voted not to allow gym suits in 1 pus frequently and find it dif- the dining halls. It was brought ficult to get rides which will up that women have been wear get them back on time. , ing them in the dining halls An objection was raised that , since the rule allowing bermuda girls might use the late hours; shorts was passed. for dating when they return to The deadline for applying for ;campus. But it was stated thatIWSGA committees was set for there has not been a penalty giv-Oct. 31. Women may apply in the en to a girl for dating on a travel- WSGA office. 203 C Hetzel Union. Prepared Assemblymen See Page 4 Arthur J Goldberg, USW gen eral counsel, said he would be before the court at 10 a.m Judge Staley said the union had challenged the constitutionality of a section of the Taft-Haitley Act granting courts the right to ban strikes George C. Doub, assistant U.S.• attorney genera 1, told Judge Sorg that the federal government would oppose the appeal. The injunction issued by Judge Sorg would prohibit the union from continuing its strike against the nation's basic steel industry for a maximum of 80 days as pro vided by the Tatt-Hartley The government sought the in junction on ciders hom President Eisenhower who said the strike was endangering the nation's eco nomic health and safety. Judge Sorg's momentous ruling 'was delayed by a three-hour con ference among comp my and union !attorneys over retroactive pay. The union told the judge that if the strikers returned to work under an injunclion, any eco nomic settlement negotiated in the meantime should be retro• active to the resumption of work. Company attorneys objected to this pioposal. contending "the Approves Permissions By ELAINE MIELE FIVE CENTS
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