Weather Fore Mostly Clou • Colder VOL. 60. No. 118 Violato s !ed kial Dismis By Jud loard of the t Govern handed The Judicial : Women's Stude ment Associatio town no penaltirs yesterday In the cases of , the women students convicted of violat ing a local ordinance in connec tion with the March 18 raid at LaGalleria. In reviewing the cases the Board also voted not to have the cases placed on the women's per manent record cards. The board ruled that the girls were not adequately informed of the borough ordinance and have already suffered unduly because of the incident, Joan Beidler, act ing chairman of the board said. The board voted to send letters to the Borough Chief of Police, Borough Council and the State Liquor Control Board, recom mending that a copy of this ordi nance be posted in all local estab lishments which serve alcoholic beverages, Miss Beidler said. State and local laws concern ing drinking and visiting estab lishments which serve liquor will be explained as part of the Freshmen Orientation Program next fall, Dorothy J. Lipp, dean of women said. Dean Lipp also said she plans to recommend that a printed cir cular explaining these regulations be placed in the mailboxes of all upperclass women at the begin ning of each academic year. In other business, Miss Beidler announced requests for late hour permissions should be turned into the Dean of Women's office in care of Miss Lois McCulloch one week in advance of the Tuesday Judicial Board meetings. The requests should include reasons for the request, the name of the applicant, her phoneand room number and the name of her residence hall hostess, Miss Beidler said. Voting to End Today Voting for SGA officers, class presidents and class rep resentatives will end today. The polls in the Helsel Union Building will be open until 7 p.m, Voting in Sackett, Fores try, Boucke and Sparks will end at 5 p.m. Giant Pro'attor TV Tests Considered By NICK! WOLFORD The University may become the first in the world to ex periment with a brand new type of television projector which produces black and white pictures up to 24 by 34 feet in size. Dr. Clarence R. Carpenter, head of the Division of Academic Re search and Services, said that Fel ton Davis, Jr., of I Eidophor Inc., had contacted the University about using the recently perfect ed projector called Eidophor. However, Carpenter explained that the University had-not made any agreement with the corpora tion about experimenting with the projector. , The new_ projector is based on the control layer process, in which electrical impulses from the camera control an electron. der .01 tittg STATE COLLEGE, PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 6. 1960 SGA ELECTIONS . . . Robert Cararie, freshman in engineering from Chicora, casts his vote as Elections commission members Pat Gardner, sophomore in liberal arts from Glenshaw, and Floyd Greer, junior in business administration from Coraopolis, look on. Gamma Phi, TKE Place Ist in IFC Sing Gamma Phi Beta 'and Tau Kappa Epsilon won top honors in the Ninth Annual Interfraternity-Panhellenic Sing last night. Pi Beta Phi and Tau Kappa Epsilon won first place in the quartet division. James Jimmiro, Beta Theta Pi graduate student, was master of ceremonies for the fi nals which were held in Schwab Auditorium. Second place in the group contest went to Alpha Xi Del ta and Pi Kappa Phi. Delta Del ta Delta and Acacia won third place honors, and Alpha Delta Pi and Phi Gamma Delta came in fourth. ' Kappa Kappa Gamma and Theta Chi won second place in the quartet finals, while Kappa Alpha Theta and Alpha Kappa Lambda came in third. Alpha Xi Delta and Acacia won fourth place in the quartet- division. Each fraternity group sang one number of its own choice in ad dition to the required number, "Halls of Ivy." The required sor ority number was "September Song." Directed by Henry Deemer TKE (Continued on page five) beam which bombards and thus modifies the surface of a film of oil in a concave mirror. Light passing through the resulting wrinkles in the oil film is pro jected through a special grating onto the screen. Carpenter said that if the new projector were_ used in the edu cational television experiments here, "it should not just be used to test learning from a professor standing before a class." He said the new system might be used for a biology course where the showing of many de tails is very important. Then, he said, .the informational learning of those students under the new system could be compared with the informational learning of stu dents in the regular television sec tions. The new projector could also be placed where it might handle the overflow of people from events held in Schwab Auditorium or Recreation Hall, Carpenter said. Eidophor can project a colored FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Cold Will Continue; Flurries ExpeCted A rapid change in the overall weather pattern brought a return of cold weather to this area yes terday. The cold weather will continue today and there is a chance of a few brief snow flurries. Today's high will be near 46 degrees. Fair and cold weather should continue tonight with tempera tures dipping to the freezing mark. Mostly cloudy and slightly warmer weather is due tomor row with a chance of a few show ers during the afternoon. Windy and colder temperatures are predicted for tomorrow night. image up to 12 by 16 feet. But Carpenter explained that the University's originating equip ment can be used only for black and white pictures and the sharpness of detail is not as good in the colored image. Eidophor (pronounced EYE-do for) was developed by Dr. Edgar Gretener A. G. of Zurich, Switzer land. His firm was backed by CIBA Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. The control layer system of television projection was invent-1 ed in 1939 by Dr. Fritz Fischer ati, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. The first public demonstration of Eidophor was at a 1959 meet ing of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The audience which viewed a demonstration of scientific experi ments being projected like by Eidophor numbered approximate ly 2100. rgiatt l's" Disarm Plan Rejected by West GENEVA (11)) The West rejected the Khrushchev total disarmament plan yesterday as too formless and dangerous to provide a basis for negotiation. The action deadlocked the 10-nation conference on dis armament since the Soviet Union previously turned down the West's plan for gradual disarm ing. The next move appears to be up to Moscow. Western sources suggested the Soviets have these alternatives 0 They can change tack quick ly and begin discussing concrete disarmament pioposals along the lines suggested in the Western plan. • They can wait for new direc tives to emerge from the summit conference opening in Paris May 16. •Or they can even keep the negotiations frozen until the next United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York next au tumn. The Western delegations are prepared to keep on talking as long as the Soviets wish. The West's rejection was announced by U.S. Ambassador Frederick M. Eaton and French disarmament expert Jules Moch. Eaton said the Soviet plan was so formless it threatened the world with anarchy. With no pro vision for an international police force, Eaton declared the Soviet plan would result "in the enslave ment of small nations by their large neighbors." "We cannot accept as a basis for discussion the Soviet plan or any text resembling it," Moch declared. Informants said the delegations from the United States, Britain, France, Italy and Canada have concluded Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. 'Lorin came to Geneva without any precise plan at all. He arrived inertly with the generalities of the total disarmament plan Premier Nikita Khrushchev put forward at the IU.N. last fall. His answers to questions reveal he lacks a detailed draft treaty in his briefcase, Western sources said. Fund Drive Planned By 'Picket' Group The anti-segregation group, which resumed their picket ing of Bunn's Barber Shop at 110 S. Allen St. yesterday, is organizing a fund drive set for April 24 through 29. Mrs. Peter Day, co-chairman of the drive, will meet with Robert G. Bernreuter, special assistant to the president on student affairs, on Friday to get -------- final approval on details of the ers. Organizations interested in plan, supporting the drive may contact As the plan stands now, money ! Regina Olvis, on campus, or MIS raised would be used to pay forlDay legal defense of persons arrested during non-violent anti-segrega tion demonstrations in the South. In addition, the funds would help encourage participation in pro grams and conferences designed to increase anti-segregation dem onstrations. The program for the drive will include a series of speakers from local groups who will talk en the issue of segregation flu weekend preceeding the drive. A definite listing of speakers has not been decided. The organizers of this move ment plan to find one local group, probably with church affiliation, to be their main sponsor. They will then seek both student and community groups to be endors- Should You Vote? Borough To Deputize 3 Patrolmen At least three campus pa trolmen will be deputized as special borough policemen ,within the next week, Burgess Roy D. Anthony said at the 'State College Borough Coun cit meeting. Since Anthony's statement !Monday night, there has been some question as to the legality ;of this move. The problem hinges upon the question of whether the University is part of the Borough of State College. Anthony said County Judge Paul R. Campbell has given his ;opinion that the University is part jof the Borough, and that the dep utizing would be legal. Col. Lucien E. Bolduc, chief of ;the Campus Patrol, said yester day he had checked the decisions of the University solicitors in the past, and that none of them ever considered the University as part 'of the Borough. IBorough solicitor Robert R. Kistler said he believes the Uni versity is within the Borough, `but that it is a special case because lof its status as a non-profit in stitution and its close ties with the state government. ( Bellefonte Jury Convicts Physics Grad Student Rama Mohanty, graduate stu 'dent in physics from State Col 'lege, was yesterday found guilty iby a Bellefonte jury of failing to reveal his identity at the scene lof an accident. By MEG TEICHHOLTZ Steven Blum, chairman of the anti-segregation movement in State College, today reef- firmed his conviction that the group is "sincerely interested in ascertaining the opinion of the townspeople on she picket ingof Bunn's Shop." With this aim the group has scheduled a meeting for tomor row night with town leaders and officials at the Bela Schlow Mem orial Library. Bunn, when contacted by the Collegian yesterday, declined to comment on the current situati(.n. The leaders of the group plan to continue their "non-violent" dem onstration for as long as this ac ition is deemed necessary, Blum See Page 4 FIVE CENTS
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