......, ~,..--,,,,,,tt f it t o i titt ~...„..,..„ VOL. 60. No. 37 STATE COLLEGE,JDA.. THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 5. 1959 FIVE CENTS Penn St Raiders The constant ill again last night in campus and , the S A spontaneous I balled into a crow.' Amend ents Get First AIM OK The Association of Indepen dent Men Board of Governors last night approved on first reading two proposed consti tutional amendments. Phillip Hines, president of the Town Independent Men Council, proposed the first amendment. It calls for the sum total of all grants to councils being divided pro portionately to the number of stu dents represented by the council. Carl Smith, AIM parliamentar ian, said the idea of the amend ment was to formalize the prac tice already in existence. Smith proposed the other amendment, which would de lete sections 3C. 3E and 3F of Article 5 from the AIM consti tution for one year. The three sections deal with requirements of members of the area tribunals set up under the new Student Government Consti tution which went into effect last semester. According to Smith, the three sections were causing the area presidents hardship in finding suitable people to fill the area courts because of their semester, average and other restrictions. The amendment deletes the sec tions until July 1, 1960. Smith said this should offer the needed time to establish the judicial sys tem. —Colletaan' Photo by Damp Trump ORANGEMAN HANGED by students during last night's spon taneous rally and torch-light parade to bolster spirit for the State- Syracuse game. More than 3000 students took part in the rally. More than 3000 students „ T • e , the N on Syracuse FOR A BETTER PENN STATE ; to Spirit Booms; Attack Syracuse By JOHN BLACK Assistant Sports Editor dercurrent of Penn State spirit erupted wo areas 200 miles apart—the Penn State racuse campus. ally of students in the Nittany area snow- it moved across campus to the Lion Shrine branishing banners, torches, and a polka-dot clad dum my Orangeman with an arrow through his chest. of 2500 as The Ying-Yang band led the group which burst forth with cheers and fight songs and finally started the cry to "Hang the Orangeman." The boys from Montgomery House who "gave birth" to the Orangeman promptly obliged. stringing him from the nearest tree while the bugler solemnly played taps. After another rally was called for 9 tonight; and then the crowd disbanded and led by a spirit. laden car, headed for downtown, Iwhere they picked up a motor cycle escort and paraded down College Ave., chanting all the way. Meanwhile, a raiding party of nine men reported a successful escapade to Syracuse. A blue swath gave Piety Hall a face uplifting as statues, sidewalks, pillars, the Library and the Stu dent Union sported a fresh coat of bright blue paint, including the artists' initials PSU. At a hastily called meeting last night, Nittany Halls resi dents enlisted a corps of volun teer troops to guard the Lion Shrine, the obelisk, the library and other vital points from im pending attack by invaders from the North. The Syracuse raid avenged a sneak pre-meditated attack on the Nittany Lion in the wee hours of yesterday morning. D-E-A-D was spelled out in large orange letters across the side of the Lion, with a big splotch on his head. Other banners, such as "State Squeeze the Orange" and "Orange Juice for Pitt," continued to pop up on campus and even from apartment houses inhabited by town students. The "Go, Ying-Yangs" banner which originally bedecked Mc (Continued on page 8) IFC Board Requests Open Frosh Parties The Interfraternity Council Board of Control will recom mend to the IFC Monday that ! freshmen be permitted in fra ternities from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. ! on Saturdays. The recommendation will be acted upon Monday and will not be effective this weekend, Robert Parksy, board chairman, said, The Board felt that present de ferred rushing system needs to be studied further but in the mean time several improvements could be made to the system, Parksy said. One of these involved the limitation of the social aspect of rushing. Fraternities could further their rushing, without incurring great er expense, by opening their par ties to freshmen Saturday eve nings. The meal-time rushing would not be intensified, nor would the studying time of fresh men be affected, Parksy said. The freshman drinking ban would still be in effect. In other action, the Board ac quitted Sigma Chi and Alpha Ep silon Pi fraternities of pledging men without proper averages. Sufficient evidence was present ed by both fraternities to show their inocence. Both pledges,,, in volved in the discussion were be lieved to have been pledged with out a 2.0 All-University average or a 2.2 previous semester's av erage. Storms Will Cause Weather Changes A vigorous storm system which is moving through the Great Lakes region today will cause ra pid weather changes in this area today and tonight. Today will be and warm with pow afternoon tern- peratures in the unseasonably mild middle 60's. Temperatures will fall rapid ly tonight reach ing the middle 20's by - tomor: ow morning. T- r o omorrow should be cloudy, windy and quite cold with snow flurries likely. While no appreciable snow accumulation is anticipated, a thin blanket of snow is possible by to- 1 morrow morning. Eisenhower Plans Good Will Tour WASHINGTON (AP)—Presi dent Eisenhower announced yesterday he is undertaking lan unprecedented 20,000-mile goodwill mission next month to nine nations on three conti nents. The pre-Christmas tour will take Eisenhower to Europe, Asi and a corner of Africa. No president ever has attempted anything like this 19-day expedi tion to the capitals of Italy, Tur key, Pakistan, Afghanistan, India, Iran, Greece, Prance and Moroc co. Eisenhower told a news confer ence he will be off Dec. 4. He expects to fly back to Washington Dean OK's TIM Parties Independent men living in downtown residences may petition the Town Independent Men's Council for permission 'to entertain women students on weekends. Final approval from the dean of men's office on this pro posal came yesterday afternoon as the council was meeting in a special session to vote on the report of the Independent Social House Committee. Prior ap-; proval had been granted by the, 1 dean of women's office. Committee chairman Kelly Ma:, F rosh Get ther reported that Jesse Jan,figian,, Women's Student Government Association president, said WSGA would act on revision of its regu lations to permit women to attend the downtown parties, Acording to the committee re-i port, which was adopted in toto by 'Clock a unanimous vote, permission to entertain women will be granted after the following conditions are: Freshman women can take met:he organization must !two 1 a.m. permissions tomor- T peti fion the council to have the It - ow and Saturday night of this house approved for a social weekend. charter that will last one year. Requirements for approval are The Women's Student Govern that the house have separate Iment Association accepted a pro lavatory facilities and a game Iposal from Paula White, newly or party room separate from elected freshman senator, to ex sleeping quarters. tend freshmen hours for Junior Before being approved the ! Pmn weekend. house will be inspected first by, Freshman women have pre a member of the council and then viously received interchangeable by someone from the dean of midnight and 1 a.m, permissions men's or dean of women's office, for big weekends. The persons sponsoring the par-; It was also proposed that ty must elect one of their number i upperclass women be allowed to act as social chairman, Ma- r , to interchange the 2 a.m. and ther said. This person will be re- 1 a.m. permissions that they sponsible for all dealings with the would receive for this weekend. council and the deans' offices. Jessie Janiigian, president of The chairman will obtain four WSGA, said that the dean of social event notices, - Which must women and dean of men's off i be filled out and returned to the cos approved of the idea. TIM office at least 10 days be- She explained further that Wil fore the event. The copies will I mer E. Wise, assistant to the dean be submitted to the council, H of men, suggested that WSGA dean of men, dean of women withhold its approval of the idea and the organization itself. for this weekend. Wise said that Individual houses will be re- housemothers for fraternity par sponsible for compliance with, ties have already been hired for Senate regulations for social func-;2 a m. tomorrow 'night and 1 a.m. tions, the report stated. lon Saturday. A standing committee, konwn If the hours were interchange. as the TIM Board of Control, willlable fraternities would have to enforce the contract made when be contacted to find out iWheir the organization was granted its housemothers would be present charter. This Board of Control until 2 a.m. both nights. will enforce the Senate regula-! tions and any other regulations established by the council, and it! will determine when a violation! of these regulations hAs been com-: mitted. If the violation is not correct- be brought up a future meet ed, the charter of the house will p ing when fraternities can make be revoked and, if it is of a se- arrangements in advance for it. rious nature, the responsible The senate also approved the party will be referred to the ;Town Independent Men's pro- Off-Campus Tribunal. Iposal that the dean of men author- Decisions of the Board of Con-'ize certain private homes other trol will be reconsidered upon than fraternities for the enter written petition by CO per cent of tainment of women. those present at the event, and a', further appeal may be made to Tickets on Sale Today the council following recommen- . For Cross Game Holy dation by the board, according to the report. ; Tickets are now on sale for the The Board of Control will alno,Penn State-Holy Cross football be responsible for getting checkHgame, Nov. 14 on Beaver Field, ers and other personnel and for l at the ticket office in Recreation carrying out party inspections. 'Hall. Dec. 22. 1 isis like to fish in troubled wet- He also did a bit of travel- ! ers and there are certainly ing around at the news canfer- I troubled waters there." ence, touching on developments ; Then there was the matter of both at home and abroad. :Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of The President said everyone New York and the way he is eye was astonished and almost dis-ling the Republican presidential mayed by the TV quiz show scan- nomination. Rockefeller spent 70 dais and "nobody will be satis-:minutes with Eisenhower last fied until this whole mess is,wek. cleaned up." I For a good portion of the time, The Federal Trade Commission,:Eisenhower said, they talked he said, is loking into the possi-about civil defense, a common in bility there was deceitful adver-Iterest. But also on that visit "we tising and the Justice Department;talked politics all across the will report before the end of the; board," Eisenhower said. He add year on whether laws were violat-;ed, though, that "I could not pos ed and new laws are needed. Isibly remember now any kind of The Commurist menace, Eisen-.conclusion we reached." hower said, was an obvious topic] Eisenhower said he plans brief, to raise in protesting anti-U.S.informal visits to the various cap demonstrations in Cuba because: itals in response to friendly visits i "We know that the Common- from heads of other governments. By PAT VARGO By ELAINE MIELE The senate agreed to with- hold the change and voted to give upperclass women a 2 a.m. permission tomorrow and a 1 a.m. on Saturday. The interchanging of hours will