SGA Adjourns for Revisions OIR VOL. 61, No, 111 STATE COLLEGE. PA., FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 7, 1961 FIVE CENTS Senate Hears Ideas For Final Exams Ey LYNNE CEREFICE and POLLY DRANOV Two proposals for a final=exam system under the four term plan were discussed by the University Senate yesterday. The first came from the Committee on Academic Stand ards which proposed that exams be given during the regular class hours, at the option of t The report by the committee ex plained that the scheduling of fi nal exams during the regular class hours will tend to decrease the stature of the final exam. According to the report, the committee felt that because of this loss of stature, the indivi dual instructors not the colleges should decide whether or not to give final exams. Joseph Jordan, associate pro fesor of chemistry, introduced an amendment to the committee's proposal suggesting that all ref -1 erence to final exams b^ elimin ated from the Senate regulations. Jordan's amendment was defeat ed for lack of a second and the original proposal of the commit tee was passed by the Senate. A second plan was proposed in an informational report submit ted by a sub-committee of the Ed ucational Policy Committee. The Sub-Committee on the Im provement of Instruction pro posed that all class meetings dur ing the last three days of the term be extended from 75 min utes to two hours to make room for final exams. This plan would involve running classes into the evening hours as last as 11 p.m. Classes would thus be conducted from 8 a.m. until 11 p.m. during the 3-day period. The second part of the report suauested that two comprehen sive exams be giyen all students at the midpoint and at the end of their college careers. The first exam would be taken after a student has completed six terms and would be termed the "intermediate examination"; and the second which would be taken before graduation, would be known as the "baccalaureate ex amination." The report which the Senate re ceived cannot be acted upon un til it is developed into something more than an informational pro posal. MODEL OF TOMORROW'S CAMPUS on display in _the HUB shows the proposed new buildings and the eventual layout of central campus. Dana Schrader, senior in petroleum engineering from Philadelphia, and Chuck Purbaugh, senior in petroleum en gineering from Duluth, Minn., examine the campus of the future. ,• • • 6, • , At• ? z e) FOR A BETTER PENN STATE he instructor. Walker Appoints Special Committee On Peace Corps Nine faculty members have been appointed by President Eric A Walker to act as a special committee on the Peace Corps. The appointment wa s an nounced at yesterday's University Senate meeting by Robert G. Bernreuter, special assistant to the President for student affairs. The committee will work in connection with the Senate Com mittee on Educational Policy to recommend changes in academic procedures to pave the way for , the adoption of the Peace Corps lat the University, Bernreuter said. Walker has requested that the committee present its recommen dations for a Peace Corps project to him by May 15. The faculty members who will serve on the committee are Rob ert A. Murray, head of the De partment of History, who was ap pointed chairman; Gifford H. Al bright, assistant professor of ar chitectural engineering; Nicholas M. Brentin, associate professor of Romance languages; and William J. Cain, Jr., professor of air sci ence. Also appointed are Russell B. Dickerson, associate dean and di rector of the College of Agricul ture; Katherine H. Fisher, associ ate professor of foods and nutri tion; George N. Guthrie, associate professor of psychology; John D. Lawther, associate dean of physi cal education; and Charles R. Marsh, associate professor of elec trical engineering.. Expansion Backed By Ed Report By JOEL MYERS Assistant City Editor (See 'related editorial,. page 4) President Eric A. Walker, gratified by the Governor's Education Committee report, says "we hope that the Gov ernor and the Legiilature will recognize that the quickest way to get action is to support Penn State's request for an ap propriation of $23 million in 1961-62." The report, which was made public Sunday, was in line with the University's own expansion plans calling for an enrollment of 25,000 on the main campus and 10,000 at the Commonwealth cam puses by 1970. "We are satisfied that we can do this, and more, if necessary, to help the Commonwealth meet its educational commitment to the people of Pennsylvania," Walker said. The report also called for the expansion and transformation of state colleges into first-rate. lib eral arts colleges and suggested that state-aid to private institu tions be frozen at present levels until detailed and specific goals are established. "It is perfectly clear from the report that the Governor's Corn mitte regards tried-and-tested in stitutions as the firmest founda tion upon which to build a sound system of higher education for Pennsylvania," Walker said. Commenting further, he said, "Especially gratifying, of course, is the committee's recognition that Penn State and the state colleges constitute the commonwealth's major source of strength in at tacking the critical problems of the decade ahead." Penn State has already begun to expand its facilities, according to Walker, Eleven hundred addi tional students were accepted this year, and Walker said up to 1500 more would be admitted next year if the funds are made avail able, To finance this expansion, Walker has requested $23 million from the State Legislature for this year's operations. Governor David L. Lawrence, on the oth er hand, recommended a stand still appropriation of $l7 million, pending the report of his special education committee. Two Leaders Agree on Berlin WASHINGTON (iP)—Presi dent John F. Kennedy and (Prime Minister Harold Mac 'millan of Great Britain agreed yesterday that the Western position in West Berlin would be fully maintained. Reiteration of the Western po sition that there will be no weak ening of obligations to the people of the Communist-encircled city was agreed upon by the two lead ers during a 2 1 / 2 -hour cruise down the Potomac River. Apart from Berlin, they were described as having covered the crisis in Laos, violent Communist hit-and-run raids in South Viet Nam, disarmament and the cur rent negotiations with Russia at Geneva on a nuclear weapons test Ignores Senate Order; Halts Spring Elections . SGA Assembly last night moved into a "committee of the whole," thereby adjourning itself indefinitely until it comes up with a reorganized,student government. Spring elections are postponed until reorganization is complete. • The action overrode a directive from the Senate Commit- 'Outsiders' Give Views On SGA By CAROL KUNKLEMAN SGA Assembly's decision last night to form a committee of the Whole to work on a reorganized student govern= ment gave some "outsiders" a chance to express their observa tions on the scene. One such observer was John Brandt, former chairman of Cam pus Party and sponsor of several pages of changes in the SGA con stitution. Brandt fold the Assembly that he had foreseen the directive issued by the Senate Commit tee on Student Affairs which orders it to elect only officers and the senior class president in the spring elections and meet regularly, until the end of the semester to draw up a new stu dent governing body. Another spokesman, Richard Snyder, former Assemblyman, urged the Assembly to take the initiative to "lead rather than be led." Snyder's comments fol lowed SGA President Dick Ha ber's reading of the committee's directive. The former Assemblyman en dorsed a proposal by Jacqueline Leavitt, C-Sr., to dissolve SGA Assembly and form a "giant" re organization committee. Challenging Haber's concept of student government at the Uni versity was Dennis Foranni, a member of the gallery. "Studentgovernment exists for the interest of the students, not for the charter: We should not exist solely-to follow one," Foranni said. Adding a final comment on the directive, Dennis Eisman, chair man of Campus Party, said SGA should carry the will of the stu dents to the administration, not the will of the administration to the students. Later, when Susan Sherman, ISGA secretary-treasurer, pointed out to the Assembly that the Sen ' ate committee acts as advisors to SGA and that it would "laugh" at attempts to defy a decision, ,Eisman retorted that he was not ,concerned with this matter. I "I want them (the committee) to know that the function of stu dent government is to represent , the students," Eisman said. ban treaty. Some optimism about the pros peets for a long-term peaceful so lution in Laos was evident. U.S. officials who reported the agreenient on Berlin said Kennedy and Macmillan were also in general agreement t'•it in any new negotiations Russia on Berlin the conces sions previously offered by the West would not provide a gad , ing point. On the contrary, it was agreed that negotiations would begin without such con cessions. The President and prime min ister recognized, officials report ed, • that there might well be a new Berlin crisis sometime this year since Soviet Premier Khru shchev has said he wants a solu tion of that problem. On nuclear test's Kennedy and Macmillan were in agreement, informants reported, that Rus By MEG TEICHHOLTZ tee on Student Affairs which told SGA to freeze the Assembly, elect only SGA officers this spring and get a new system of government by next fall. The new and nameless com mittee will meet "every night until we have a reorganization plan," Donald Claggett, vice president and chairman of the committee said brusquely. He may reconvene Assembly as soon as reorganization is com pleted. Meetings are open to anyone who wants to attend, and are to be conducted informally. .The first will be at 7 p.m. tonight in 203 Het7Cl Union building. The "let's roll up our sleeves and get into this job" attitude of Assembly, came after indignant comments an the letter to Assem bly from the Senate Committee on Student Affairs. In this vein Jacqueline Leavitt, 1.1-Sr., asked SGA President • Richard Haber (who read the letter) "how and why the Ad ministration is responsible for SGA? I thought we were sov ereign!" Haber replied, "We are not a final governing body." Leavitt then asked "Why are we here in the first place?" Haber said that the Senate Committee was not acting to les sen SGA's power but to let it remain as it is to plan a new system of government. A motion which would have "frozen" the Assembly, much as the Senate Committee requested, was defeated by SGA at its last meeting. A motion by James Sloane, freshman class president to re spond to the Senate Commit tee's directive with a request for reconsideration was de feated. The SGA action, expressed by one assemblyman as "calling a spade a spade," would give the executive branch of SGA power to legislate in the interim period until the new system is completed. Deferment Forms For Fees Available Deferred fee applications for the summer term are available at the Bursar's office in 6 Willard. A student who is interested in deformerit of fees should secure a blank. have it signed by his parent and returned to the Bur sar's office before registration on June 13 and 14, Richard H. Baker, bursar, said yesterday. All students . are eligible for a 25 per cent deferment of fees, he added. Since students 'must have fee receipts for summer registra tion all students should plan to pay their fees early or make de ferment application, Baker said. sia's proposal for a nuclear test ban control system under a three-man directorate with a built-in Soviet veto was totally unacceptable. The directorate would be com posed of one Western, one Soviet and one neutral official and the big power representatives would have to agree on any action taken. In the Western view, that would mean. a Soviet veto over inspec tion to prevent cheating on the test ban treaty. Kennedy and Macmillan were said to feel that three steps should be taken simultaneously the ,cease-fire should he agreed on in the Laos civil war, an internation -lal control commission of Canada, Poland and India should meet at New Delhi 'to undertake supervi sion of the cease-fire, and the date and place should be fixed for an international conference on Laos.