FRIDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1959 Corn ittee to Study Indie Merger Plan The committee which will be studying the proposed Association of Independent Men - Leonides merger should "bring us a constitution," Stafford Friday told the AIM Board of Governors Wednesday nigh, In proposing that the me Friday said, "This is the only sure way to know what we're doing." Friday's proposal was to send the merger plan to a committee before officially approving the merger. Carl Smith, AIM parlia mentarian, had asked that the merger be approved before a con stitution was drawn up. Leonides Council approved the merger by a vote of 17 to 6 on Monday night. AIM failed to approve the merger by a vote of 30 to 4 on Wednesday. Yesterday, Smith said that a l committee had been set up in conjunction with Leonides and that it would set down the basic principals for the merged organ ization. He said he hoped to have this list of principles to present to the AIM Board of Governors for ap proval at its next meeting. Both Smith and Friday are members of the committee. At Wednesdays board meet ing, Smith had moved that the board approve the merger. If that motion had passed, Smith said he would have moved that a committee be set up to work out a constitution. At the meeting, he said this would give the committee a clear picture of what they were work ing on He added that if AIM and Leonides did not like the consti tution or a feasible plan for the new organization could not be made, the motion to merge could be repealed. Frank Pearson, AIM vice presi dent, said that the merger would solve problems that will arise when the community living pro gram goes into full effect. TOMORROW OCT. rger be sent to a committee, Faculty Members Attend Annual Speech Meeting Several faculty members of the Department of Speech partici pated in the 20th annual conven tion of the Pennsylvania Speech Association in Philadelphia re cently. Dr. Harold E. Nelson, as presi dent of the association that in cludes the divisions of clinical speech and hearing, general speech, and the speech arts and has more than 650 members, pie sided at the meetings. —Stars and stripes in the Amer ican flag were suggested by the coat of arms of the Washington family. . . .. .... . ..., , ... . ...• .... ... . - • ••• • ,••••:•• •• •• ••• . ." .....-.--: ••• -e• ... .. .. : ...„... ........r1.1.,,.... ..';...:....--:,:•.,•.,..... .:,... .. -:.--". .. ~ ....-'::..- ...:.:.. - -....,' .11 ... - ...- ''':.•:....:' • , . .. .... ..,-.,.•,: ..... :. . . . .:-. •....•, ...•. - • ,•-• •• • . . :•. : ......•• .•••:._.- : : •:•.-:::. -•-•. • : • .. 24 2 P.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA 4 Faculty Men Attend Institute Four faculty members partici pated in the program for the 4th annual Institute for Juvenile and Correctional Personnel held last week. They were John H. Ferguson, director of the Institute of Public Administration Robert E. Dun ham, instructor of speech; Dr. Harold J. O'Brien, assistant to the dean of the College of the Liberal Arts, and Harold P. Zel ko, professor of speech. Pennsylvania Attorney General Anne X. Alpern spoke on the wide disparity in sentences handed down by different judges and their effect on Pennsylvania Law. She urged that definite minimum sentences for various crimes be set up. The Institute was conducted by the Institute of Public Adminis tration and the Continuing Edu cation Services of the University. —One agate line of copy in ev ery daily newspaper in the U.S. costs $264.70. $2,647 buys a ten line message in 58,000,000 copies of daily newspapers. SIGMA CHl's Ist ANNUAL Lumley Joins Faculty Of Research Laboratory Dr. John L. Lumley, formerly . of the mechanical engineering de partment of the John Hopkins University, has been named as-! ,sistant professor of engineering research at the Ordnance Re search Laboratory. Dr. Lumley received his bach elor of arts degree in engineer ing sciences and applied physics at Harvard and his master of sci ence degree in mechanical en gineering at Johns Hopkins, where he also received his doctor of philosophy degree in aeronautics. HOLMES FIELD Encampment-- (Continued from page one) other location to eliminate exist ing problems. Ellen Burke (C.-Sr), a mem 'her of the Book Exchange groups' using the the same fa the problems resulting from two Board of Control, enumerated cilities. The SCCA hours are from 12:30 to 5:30 p.m., she said, causing the SCCA to move upstairs to the Hetzel Union ticket desk since the BX was open only until 5 m. She told Assembly that many ! students mistake BX personne l as SCCA workers, and that BX fa 'l 'ties are now crowded. - ,A, (Behind the HUB) PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers