ruumussaettimminasassamt Weather Forecast: Cloudy, Cold VOL. 61. No. 1,14 Newman To Appear Before SGA Monroe Newman, chairman of the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, will appear before SGA's committee of the whole at 7 p.m. tonight in 203 HUB. Newman will answer questions on student government and its status at the University but will not tell the committee what changes should be made - under SGA reorganization, according to Donald Clagett, SGA vice-presi dent. Glageit made the announce ment of Newman's' visit after being asked by the SCA com mittee to report on the Senate committee's general - opinion on" reorganization. Clagett said that Newman again reinforced the Senate com mittee's feeling presented in a letter •to the Assembly last week. The present SGA constitution is indaequate, Clagett said, and the Senate committee's ultima tum in the letter that the SGA officers and the senior class pres ident be elected this spring is "of ficial and binding." The main criticism of the pres ent government is that there are "vague constituencies," Clagett said. At the SGA meeting last night, no decision was reached on how to dissolve the prob lem of constituencies through representation on Assembly. Four main ways of representa tion class president, student council representatives, class rep resentatives and living areas were planned for discussion. The committee favored class presidents sitting on Assembly and was against student council representatives having official seats. No decision was reached on class representation. The corn mittee decided to adjourn until tonight so that James Sloane, freshman class president, could report on the opinion of the Fresh man Advisory Board before a fi nal straw vote is taken. Sloane asked for adjournment on the grounds that the advisory board would express student opinion on class representation. Career Exhibits Will Continue In HUB Today Satellites, telephones, paper samples, televisions and lawn mowers which were among the 26 displays of the Career Exposi tion covered the ground floor of the Hetzel Union Building yes terday. The displays will also be open today from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. The Exposition, sponsored by the University Placment Service and the Inter-College Council Board, features industry and business displays from various parts of the country, "There were at least 4000 visi tors at the exhibition today," Richard Westrick, co-chairman of the exposition said. From the company representa tives students are able to receive first-hand information concern ing the work and preparation in volved for particular jobs. Delphi Blanks Available Applications for Delphi, sopho more men's hat society, are now available at the dean of men's of fice. Second and third semester students with a minimum 2.0 All- University average may fill out applications before Friday. ~,4,-,, 1 r 4 ai , 4*H '',.: , Toll i,_ . , STATE COLLEGE, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 12. 1961 $17.1 . :':..ii"--:::.'fli 11 ion . to . Hold • . •••• : • • —Collegian Photo by Ed Jaffe THE MOST POPULAR PROF on campus will be selected by stu dent pennies contributed to the Prof Snarf contest. World Uni versity Service charities will benefit from the money collected at the booth at the foot of the mall and other voting centers. Corps Applications Ready in Old Main Questionnaire-type applications are now available in the dean of men and dean of women's offices for volunteers for the Peace Corps. About 200 of the questionnaires have been sent to the University, according to Wilmer E. Kenworthy, executive assistant to the President Kenworthy said yesterday 1 200,000 questionnaires have been sent to colleges and universities throughout the nation. Although no letter accom pagie& the applications, Ken , worthy said he "presumed that students can apply indefinite ly." The purpose of the question naire, as stated in the long, green application, is "to enable the Peace Corps to obtain information about the number and qualifica tions of people now prepared to volunteer for service. Any United States citizen over 18 may file an application. Mar ied couples without children un der 18 may apply if both husband and wife are willing to volunteer. The questionnaires will be used as a sort of application and those returning them need not contact the Peace Corps staff again. They include such topics as mil itary status, employment, educa tional status, language skills, country preferences, skills, knowl edge of other countries, and edu-I cational background. Skills specifically mentioned in the questionnaire include opera tion of tractors, farm equipment, bulldozers, inboard power boats, tools used by the automobile mechanic, carpenter, surveyor, plumber, electrician, and mason, or in the metal working trades; and equipment used in canning, handicrafts, chemical or biological lat.J, nursing, radio transmission and receivers. Students Fight Tax PHILADELPHIA (IP) Tem ple University students have be gun a statewide campaign against the 4 per cent Pennsylvania sales tax on books and school supplies. William D. Sherman, 20, presi dent of the Temple Student Coun cil, said yesterday that several other colleges and universities have joined Temple in asking their students to petition the state legislature to repeal the tax. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE , . . .~..~~w Sn©w Forecast For Tonight April continues to behave like a winter month and no change to more seasonable weather is ex pected for several days. In fact, wet snow is forecast for tonight and snow flurries are likely to- Irnorrow. Today should be cloudy and cool with rain beginning during the afternoon. A high temperature of 44 degrees is expected. Wet snow mixed with rain and possibly some sleet is seen for tonight. Snow accumulations should range between 2 and 3 inches with heavier amounts in the mountains. Tonight's low reading will be near 31 degrees. Snow flurries, windy and cold weather is predicted for tomor row and a high of 40 degrees is expected. Tomorrow night should be mostly cloudy -and colder. ' Eichmann Challenges Legality JERUSALEM ( ?P .._ Fa r more than a tool "dragged" in fo his actions by the Nazi state. from the concentration camps The_ triays . opening day ended he helped turn into factorieswith legalistic questions still un ved. Eichmann has not 'yet of death, Adolf Eichmanni resol pleaded to the charges. c faced his Jewish accusers yes-I. First came the reading of the terday and heard his attorney l i m n a d n ictment, in Hebrew and Ger- challenge their right to bring him to trial. His face slimed no emotion as the Israeli court read off a roll of crimes portraying him as a mastermind in the methodical ex termination of millions of Jews. Then, behind the bullet-proof glass of a specially constructed prisoner's dock, the • onetime Gestapo bureaucrat listened with Teutonic stolidness while his attorney pictured him as no egiatt Governor Plans No Changes In Budget Recommendations ' Governor Lawrence's Press Secretary, Richard Haratin, last night revealed that the Governor does not plan to change his appropriation recommendation for Penn State or for an other part of his education buc Haratin said that the Gov; Staff Heads Chosen For '62Collegian John Black was re-elected editor and Wayne Hilinski was elected business manager of The Daily Collegian by Col legian, Inc. on Monday night. Black, seventh semester senior in political science from Lancaster, has been serving as editor for the current . year. Hilinski, junior in journalism from Philadel phia, will suc ceed Chester Lucido in the po sition of business manager. Black is a trans- Black fer student from the University of Southern. Cali fornia. He served in the U.S. Mar ine Corps from 1956 to 1958. After transferring to Penn State he was named assistant sports ed itor of The Daily Collegian in April 1959. He is pre; dent of Sig: Delta Chi, me) profes sio journalism soi ety; and a mel ber of Omicr Delta Kapp men's honor defy; Pi •Sigi Alpha, politi, science hon o ary; and Aca fraternity. Hilinski has been a member of the local advertising staff and the promotion staff of The Daily Col legian. He is also a member of Alpha Delta Sigma, men's profes sional advertising fraternity. Prof Invited to Belgium Dr. Joseph Jordan, professor of chemistry has been invited to participate in a meeting of the International Committee on Elec trochemical Thermodynamics and Kinetics to be held, in Brussels, Belgium, the last week of April. He will present a paper en titled "Electrode Kinetics by Hydrodynamic Voltammetry." The document, read by . Chief Justice Moshe Landau, accused' Eichmann of criminal responsibil ity for the slaughter of six mil-, lion Jews in Nazi-dominated Eu rope during World War 11. It pictured him as the brains behind the systematic horror of notorious camps dedicated to race mur der. The man called the ' arch persecuter of European Jewry was on public view for the first time since Israeli agents ran By PAT DYER lget for the coming fiscal year. •rnor, in presenting the report of his special committee on edlica- I Lion to the legislature Monday, said the General Assembly should "close the present' business, in cluding pending bills' and then take up the education report as a separate entity." This means, Haratin ex plained, that the Governor is asking the legislature to act on the legislative program that is now before the Assembly. This program, presented by the gov ernor in January includes a 12- , month recommendation for Penn State of $17.1 million (or. $18.5 million for a 13-month fiscal year). The governor recommended that after the floor is cleared of the present program, the legisla ture then "act on the recommen dations and attack the problems presented by the report,' Haratin said. When the goverrior presented his proposed budget in January he said his recommendations for education were tentative, "pend ing the report from the special committee on education." This committee reported last week, recommending a program to improve education which would add $361.8 million to the total cost by 1969-70. However. Haratin said, in stead of planning any changes in his original budget recom mendations, the governor is asking the legislature to act on :he present program and then work on the report's recom mendations. When asked if this meant that Le governor was .leaving the hole matter of appropriations ►anges up to the legislature, 'aratin said that the governor is lot absolving himself from the !port," but would be working ;th the Senate and House irough an executive committee. "We must divorce the current legislative program from the long range program of the report," Haratin said, adding, "You cn't change the program in a day or a week or a month." Minsk! As to whether or • not any changes in specific recommenda tions might be made in time for the next fiscal year, Ilaratin said, "the time it will take is entirely up to the legislature." IFC Applications Available Applications will be available today at the Hetzel Union desk for students interested in work ing on Interfraternity Council committees. him down in Argentina almost a year ago and spirited him to Israel. Before hearing the indictment, he spoke his only word of the day into the record. That was "ja wohl," the German military way of saying yes, when he was asked to answer to his name. • Then, before he could plead to the charge, his attorney, Dr. Rob ert Servatius, contended that "one of the judges" might be preju diced. He also argued that Israeli's 1950 law covering Nazis and Nazi collaborators did not apply be cause it was enacted after the deeds in question. Servatius, noting that Eich mann was seized in Buenos Aires and brought here on Israeli or ders, contended the trial was illegal. Back to Basics --See Page 4 FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers