, - • --- tAi -- --. .i :i . . 41. 4 . . I' Weather Form's* 1 . 11' B at i g , WRECK :,. - - Ai, , 4.' • ': Partly Cloudy '.- ; " :::Z7 ' :.: I CU ti rgt TECH Cool - --...!,...: -- SATURDAY. DECEMBER 2. 1961 --Collegian Photo by Pa CHRISTMAS LIGHTS AT NIGHT: This time end of the street is the Santa Claus house. exposure of Allen Street looking toward the Lights from the library can be seen through University offers a little different view of the the arc formed by the trees along the Mall. Christmas lights of State College. At the far Senate Groups Withhold Approval of Constitution Ey ANN PALMER The University Senate Com mittee on Student Affairs and the Sub-committee on Organi zation Control yesterday held back final approval of the SGA constitution approved by the in terim government Tuesday night. The committee returned the constitution to the interim gov ernment with a recommendation concerning the judicial powers of the SGA Supreme Court, Laur ence H. Lattman, chairman of the student affairs committee, said Thursday. "The constitution seemed to be generally acceptable but wasn't approved because of a clause in Registration Outlined For Winter Term Robert Koser, associate registrar, yesterday outlined the procedure to be followed in winter term registration. Students should report to their advisers at least 24 hours in advance of the time they are scheduled to report to Recreation Hall, Koser said. At this time they will receive an IBM copy of actual course as signments for the winter term. Registration will be held in Recreation Hall from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, Jan. 3 and 4. All students are to register in accordance with the alphabetical schedule appearing on page 83 of the Time Table of Classes, he said. Late registration will be held from 8 a.m. to 12 noon Friday, Jan. 5, in 4 Willard, Koser said. As in the past. he said, a student who registers late will be charged $lO for the privilege. Any course assignments which may have been made for him will be cancelled, he added. "Schedules have been com pleted for about 14,000 students," Koser said. Failure of a course or courses in fall term; change of a program (curriculum, major or option); no opportunity to file a revised win ter schedule after fall term change or schedule period, and incom plete class assignment for winter are the only instances which will permit class assignment changes, he said. Koser reminded students to make sure they have the fol lowing articles with them when they report to Rec Rai/ for req. the constitution which would give the USG Supreme Court the power to deal with the ac tions of other student organiza tions," Dennis Foianini, SGA president, said. Foianini said the clause was incorporated into the constitution to make USG the central govern ing body for all undergraduate students. "The committee in no way feels that the reversal of this judicial decision weakens its support of 'the student court system, which is still considered a valuable part of student affairs," Lattman said. "The situation is similar to an appelate court's reversal of the decision of a lower court in the United States." The Senate committees au By JOANNE MARK istration: "A student identification card or authorization to enroll; receipt for payment of tuition and char ges for the winter term: IBM copy of winter term schedule, official registration form (No. 2 card) for spring term signed by adviser, and .a student copy of fall term grade report. "In preparation of a revised Winter term schedule, it will be to the definite advantage of the student if as many as possible of the assignments that have been made are retained," Koser said. 'Shramdan' Will Send Students on India Study Operation Shramdan, a work study project sponsored by the University Christian Association, will send five to 10 students to India next fall. Applications for the project are now available at the UCA office. Participants will be expected to do preparatory study and to raise $9OO toward their expenses. They will participate in a work camp with Indian students and work with members of the India Vil liage Service in community de velopment studies. FOR A BETTER FENN STATE THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA thorized holding elections at the scheduled time in the winter term whether a constitution is approved by then or not, Lett man said. The term of the interim govern ment was also extended until such time as a constitution is ap proved, he said. The members of the interim government will serve until writing of the consti tution is completed and newly elected members will not be seat ed until USG is chartered. Foianini said he will resume work on the constitution early in the winter term. "I am determined to make this student government a government with teeth in it. I will do every thing in .my power to see that it is done," he said. Funeral for Kakimoto A funeral service for Haruto shi Kakimoto, research as sociate in mechanical engi neering who wes killed in an automobile accident Saturday night, will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. Dr. Luther H. Harshbarger, University chaplain, will officiate at the service. ' Clifford A. Nelson, assistant coordinator of religious affairs, said that friends are asked to omit flowers. He added that memorial contributions may be sent to the Japan Society in care of Maurice Gjesdahl, 207 Mechanical Engineering. Band May Go to Bowl By CAROL KUNKLEMAN Students attending the Gator Bowl or viewing it at home via 'television may still get a chance to see Penn State's Blue Band perform. Wilmer E. Kenworthy, execu tive assistant to the president, said yesterday the issue of whether or not the band will at tend the bowl game is "not closed." "We are still considering the possibility of the band attending the game," he said. James Dun lop, director of the band, said earlier this week that he had been informed the band members could not attend the game be cause of a lack of funds. He estimated that the cost R e d 'T 0 • h n a `it en , U. 0 UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (IP)—Adlai E. Stevenson de nounced Communist China yesterday as a reckless, brutal power threatening perhaps the very survival of mankind. He declared that to seat. Peiping in the United Nations could shake world confidence in the organization. The chief U.S. delegate spoke', in the ' U.N. General Assembly: stake." he gave four principal after Valerian A. Zorin, Soviet reasons for barring the door to deputy foreign minister, called the Peiping regime; for immediate seating of Commu- •The step, once taken, is ir nist China and expulsion of the reversible, and once admitted 'Chinese Nationalists. Peiping would stay "for better or He upheld Peiping's right to worse." crush the Nationalist regime on ct There is suspicion that once Taiwan by military might. ,admitted the Chinese Communists . The Iwo big powers clashed on the opening day of a his toric debate on the Chinese rep resentation issue. Stevenson accused the Chinese critical moment in history." Communists admission. under condition Communists of operating training "in which it continues to violate camps for young guerrillas from and defy the principles of the Asia, Africa and Latin America charter, could seriously shake so they can spark revolutions in public confidence in the United their homelands by sabotage and Nations—l can assure you it would violence. ,do so among the people of the "In its present mood," said Ste-,United States—and this alone venson of the Peiping regime, "itwould significantly weaken the is a massive and brutal threai, org „ n i z „ t i on ? , to man's struggle to better his eth light of Peiping's demands, lot in his own way—and even, the expulsion of the Nationalists perhaps to man's very survival.' and admission of the Communists Its gigantic power, its reckless ambition, and its unconcern for could have only one meaning: that the United Nations acquiesced to human values. make it the major Peiping's design to conquer Tai world problem." wan and thereby "overthrow and Warning that the. "whole fn. lure of the United Nations is at Research Prof Dies At Stanford Center Sidney Siegel, research pro-! Siegel was born Jan. 4, 1916 in ' New York. He did his undergrad fessor of psychology, died sud- uate work in general studies at denly Wednesday at Stanford'San Jose State College and re ceived his master of arts and doe- University of what is believed tor of philosophy degrees, both in to have been a heart attack. ipsychology, from Stanford. I Two years ago Siegel and Law- Siegel was stricken in the officeftence E. Fouraker, former profes of his wife, Alberta Siegel, asso - ;sor of economics, were named for date professor of child develop-:the Monograph Prize Award in ment. Siegel and his. wife were:the Social Sciences of the Amer on leave from the University to, ican Academy of Arts and Sci serve during the current academic;ences for a monograph, "Bargain year at the Center for Advanced., 1 in 1 and Group Decision Making," Study in the Behavioral Sciencesi in Palo Alto, Calif. which later was published as a He had served there in 1957 i book. He is survived by his wife and on a fellowship and had been T his son Jay, a student at An the first Center Fellow to be asked to return for a second Itioch College. fellowship. During the curernt year, Siegel had been preparing ;Pleasant Weather Due publication reports concerning Parly cloudy skies and pleasant the research which he and his ily cool temperatures are indicated co-workers have conducted 'for today and tomorrow. 4-(ter during the past three years un- noon temperatures should reach" der grant support from the Na- 150 degrees both days. fional Science Foundation and Tonight should be chilly, and the Ford Foundation. ;a low reading of 30 is expected. of the trip would be approxi- j cal education, is presently try mately $9,000.. The Gator Bowl I ing to determine actual costs will be played Dec. 30 in Jack- / of a trip. sonville, Fla. 1 "We will probably not know by "We are presently cons id e -ringic Saturday whether or not the hand . i go." he said, "hut I would two aspects of the issue," Ken - - "isay that we should know definite worthy reported. "One is thel,, . y n next week." program and the other is the J actual cost of the trip." i If the University grants permis- I sion for the band to take the trip, The bowl's sponsors had pre-.h e said, band members will be viously planned the hal f-time ln otified immediately. He said he program, excluding the Blue Band, has "no idea" what the prospects Kenworthy said, and the Univer -l were for granting permission or sit.y is trying to find out whether what the administration's feel the program could be replanned ing on the matter is at the present to include the band's performance, time. or whether another special time The cheerleaders were previous before or after the game couldl y be allotted to the band. ;the game that they could not attend 1 ithe game because of the expense As to costs, Kenworthy said 'of the trip, but this decision was the quoted figures were only 'reversed Thursday. Six cheer estimates and Ernest B. McCoy, 'leaders will now be allowed to dircetor of athletics and physi- i attend the game. would be encouraged to exert "by threats and maneuvers, a most disruptive and demoralizing in fluence on the organization at this abolish the independent govern ment of the Republic of China." PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers