IWeather Forecast: Cloudy, Cool VOL. 62, No. 9 Prexy to Make Statement In Relation to ookstore 'Sometime This Week' President Eric A. Walker will make a statement "some time this week" on the student bookstore report, Wilmer E. Kenworthy, executive assistant to the president, announced yesterday. Kenworthy issued a statement saying the president is iSA Will Sponsor Series of Events For In& Week A lecture by Dr. Mary L. Willard, professor of chemis try, at 7 p.m. Thursday in Pol lock 1 lounge will be the first of a series of activities of the 1961 Indic , Week sponsored by the Independent Students Associ ation. Dr. Willard will speak on criminology. Final plans for Indie Week were discUssed last night at ISA's first meeting of the fall term. Nancy Hughes, chairman of Indie Week, said that the other activities scheduled were a hay ride Friday, a picnic sponsored by the Town Independent Me n Saturday and the annual Autumn Ball from 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday in the Hetzel Union Ballroom. Indie Week will be climaxed by a Mt. Nittany Climb Sunday afternoon. Miss Hughes said that tickets for the hayride, nic and climb are available at the Hetzel Union desk. In other business, Barry Rein, chairman of ISA, announced that the organization's constitution would go before the University Senate Committee on Student Af fairs Thursday for final approval, The organization has been operat ing without a constitution since its formation last spring. . Last night's meeting was held . primarily to acquaint interested (Continued on page eight) Customs Give Frosh Chance For Revenge Revenge, sweet revenge . . . reverse customs have been de clared for today! This is what has made customs almost bearable. . . frosh finally have the opportunity to turn the tables on the upperclassmen and bombard them with questions. and requests. A warning however only freshmen wearing their dinks and name cards are eligible to par ticipate in reverse customs. This will serve as the usual means of identification. Upperclassmen are cautioned by the Customs Board against dusting off their old dinks and name cards and masquerad ing as frosh. There are several freshmen ready, willing and able to coach upperclassmen in the cheers as well as the finer points in choral arrangements for mixed groups. Upperclassmen are warned by the Customs Board not to evade freshmen by sprinting to class, sneaking down the back steps of buildings, leaving classes via windows or contracting a case of 8 to 5 laryngitis. Transfer students who have not been required to participate in, regular customs may benefit. from a refresher course in "Hand book 100." Due warning has been given, upperclassmen. Be prepared! - -. i 'l--,,, , 4ir Tilr Elazig c, e. 11'..:s:1 / 4 4' TO 11 rgt ' ._..seils •, , By CAROL KUNKLEMAN "studying the report and has not decided what the next step will be." Kenworthy did not say when Walker had received the report. Walker returned to his office Monday after visiting the Uni versity-run research center in La Spezia, Italy and then at tended the Penn State-Miami football game Saturday in Flori da. "This is the first chance he has had to look at it," Ken worthy said. The report is a study by Albert E. Diem, vice president for busi ness administration, on the feasi bility of establishing a student run bookstore. Walker appointed Diem to make the study last June after the Board of Trustees received an SGA re port on the need for a bookstore. Kenworthy would not comment on the contents of the report or if Walker will make them public. "You will have to wait for his statement," he said. Neither would he say if Walk er will present Diem's report to the Board of Trustees at its meeting on Oct. 13. Diem also refused to comment on the report's contents, adding only that "you will have to wait for the president's decision." Phillip Steinhauer, for mer chairman of the SGA Bookstore, Committee, said yesterday that he has not been told the contents of ' the report. "The job is finished,". he said. "I am sure it is all-inclusive and will solve the bookstore issue' once and for all." Speculating on the question of whether Walker will present the report to the trustees, Stein hauer recalled that Walker said he would take this action, but added that he "didn't know Walker's intentions." Dennis Foianini, SGA president, supported Steinhauer's statement, saying that "Since President Walker requested Mr. Diem to make the report, it would be logi cal to assume that he will go to the board, whether or not the report is favorable." Seven Recommendations Made By SGA Evaluation Workshop By MEG TEICHHOLTZ Editorial Editor (This is the third of a series of articles concerning the recent student encampment. It deals with the workshop which end ' uated student government.) The "Evaluation of SGA" workshop, which spent much of its discussion on the philoso phy of student government made seven recommendations pertinent to SGA's functioning. All of these recommendations will be appended to the revised SGA constitution when it is sub mitted to the Senate Committee on Student Affairs for approval, Dennis Foianini, SGA president and chairman of the workshop said last night. The first recommendation asks SGA to determine limited areas FOR A BETTER PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 3. 1961 Syria Mass Steinhauer Heads New Hot Council The Hat Society Council, a body composed of representa tives from each of the hat so cieties on campus, was re organized Sunday night. Phil- Hip Steinhauer, president of Skull and Bones, was elected [ president of the council. The Hat Society Council was dissolved last year and replaced by a Hat Society Coordinator, a single person who organized the activities sponsored by the various hat societies. The new body grew out of an idea introduced at a meeting of Skull and Bones, senior men's hat society, to reorganize the council in order to prevent du plication of activities and to provide new services, Stein hauer said. The purpose of the new council is to organize the hat societies for the betterment of the University and to act as a liason between the administration and hat societies, he said. Steinhauer said that the first meeting of presidents and secre taries from each of the hat socie ties was held shortly after Stu dent Encampment and that the official decision to reorganize the council was made Sunday night. One of the proposed activities of the hat societies under the council will be lo replace the motorcades and mass gather ings after victorious away foot ball games with planned activi ties like bonfires and walk cedes, Steinhauer said. "There must be a less destruc tive way to celebrate than to pile 30 kids on top of a convertible," he said. Steinhauer said that one of the main purposes of the council will be to promote school spirit at sporting events in the winter a:; well as at football games and pep rallies. The hat society skits at the pep rallies have been or ganized by the council, he said. Another aim of the council is to bring a warmer, friendlier at (Continued on page six) in which it would have final gov ernmental jurisdiction. The con census at the workshop favored' seeking this jurisdiction in the judicial power of discipline. This will be the specific request made to the senate committee, chaired by Dr. Laurence Lattman. This recommendation grew from two sources. First the stu dents on the committee felt that SGA should seek some definite and irrevocable jurisdiction over some part of student affairs. Secondly, Dr. Robert Bern reuter. special assistant to the president for Student Affairs. said at the formal convocation that eventually students should have complete authority over their government affairs. He was later questioned by the students in the group as to just how much power the administra tion would permit students to gain over their own affairs. Launches De • ortation BEIRUT, Lebanon QP)—Syria's new government launched a mass deportation of Egyptians yesterday and announced the arrest of a Syrian strongman who until recently was vice president in the United Arab Republic. The jailed strongman is Col. Abdul Harnid Serraj. He quit his Cairo job for some unan nounced reason. He returned to i 4 Damascus only 48 hours before the outbreak Thursday of the army; Volunteers revolt that broke the Syrian- Egyptian union of 1958 that he had helped to promote. A broadcast communique said Serraj was arrested at a Da mascus hideout Sunday night. He was accused of carrying out subversion against Premier Ma moun Kusbari's revolutionary government. From Egypt came bitter attacks, against Kuzbaas conservative: psychologicalexamina tio n s regime as a reactionary adminis-1 , i , tration of exploiters and capital-: aulc 1 " the trainin g Pm ists. There was a veiled charge in,gram for 64 Peace Corps vol. the government - owned Cairo ~,,t „ ,,, 1,,,,, yesterday morning. press that the - United States was '-' --s- —.- somehow behind the uprising. ' Dr. Joseph Zasloff, consultant' Cairo broadcasts urged the and part time staff member to Syrians to rise against the rev. ,the training division of the Peace olutionary movement. Corps, told the volunteers at "But we might be able to turn their first orientation talk that it into a forward driving force to service in the Peace Corps "is not destroy reaction in all the Arab so much a sacrifice as an (T -" mation sphere," he said. "I must portunity. 'tell you that Arab nationalism has He described them as "chip suffered a setback, a stab, a shock pers at the wall" of misunder and treason." , standing. He said they are not Bitter, too, were hundreds of standingto the side of world Egyptians bundled out of Syria problems but are "reaching• out to take ship at Beirut for home.' and doing something," The first of several-thousand _ "The challenge of adapting Egyptians, military and civilian, yourself in another country will to be deported, they reached the,be greater culturally than physi- Lebanese border town of Masna . cally," Zasloff said„ . aboard taxis and buses with bag.-! He told the volunteers that gage piled high on the roofs. (their success in teaching assign " Go d! bless Nasser," they shout-ments in the Philippines depends ed, some with an eye on camera-lon their preparation in the train men gathered there to photographing program "even though you'll ,the exodus. "Long live the United feel the itch to get out on the job Arab Republic." halfway through your training." Damascus newspapers said the The psychological testing the Egyptian population to be evacu-'volunteers will undergo began ated includes 700 school teachers,iyesterday following their orienta -56 physicians and Health Ministry'ition talk. Included in this part employes and 50 employes of theof the program are written ex- Rural Affairs Ministry. laminations, interviews and oval (Continued on rage eight) Cloudy, Dismal Weather Will Continue Today Cloudy, dismal weather will, ,continue in this area for at least two more days as a series of weak storm systems move toward Penn sylvania. . Today and tomorrow should be cloudy acid cool with occasional, rain or drizzle. A high of 56 is ; expected today and a high of 58, is likely tomorrow. ' f Bernreuter then replied that "this varied from year to year, de pending on the administration's evaluation of the responsibility of the student leader," Later the same day Dr. Mon roe Newman, past chairman of the Senate Committee on Stu dent Affairs said "SGA would be foolish to accept Dr. Bern reufer's statement that power varies with the responsibility of the leader. It is a direct contra diction to his statement at the convocation." Elliot Newman, past SGA As semblyman, added that this phil osophy of varying power "makes a mockery of student government"' and it was in reaction to it that the group recommended establish ing defined governmental areas. Other recommendations and their background will be dis-, cussed in the next article of this series. an Early Fee Payments For Peace Corps Begin Training An orientation talk and the first of a series of liv e "REPAIRED BY THE CLASS of '62, '63 and '64" is the sequel sign to the "Out of Ordei" no tice that went up Sunday One professor was heard to say as he passed by, "It can't be—the stones are NEVER out of or der!" --See Page 4 FIVE CENTS