PAGE TWO Alfred Senate Acts on Bias • The Student Senate at Al fred University in Alfred, N.Y., took a monumental step recently in eliminating racial and religious .discrimination , .on its campus.. The Student legislative body according to a report in the Fast Lux. the Alfred student news haper ruled that all fraternities aving discriminatory clauses will _have to prove annually that they are striving to eliminate such clauses- from their constitutions. Fraternities will make these yearly progress reports to the • Student Senate on removing these clauses. If the student Senate does not feel that adequate progress is - being made and rejects the report of a fraternity. this report will 'Record' Delayed Until March 8 The first edition of the USG Record which was to be dis- 1 tributed Thursday has been de-I laye4 until March 8 due to tech-1 nical changes. Kurt Simons, editor, said thet delay is due to the fact that the' off-het printer required a week's! notice to print the paper. . 'This delay is warranted cause the off-set printing method will give the paper a better ap pearance." he said. "We Con sidered mimeographing the paper. , but we can't use photographs if we: mimeograph it.' SIMONS SAW he was also considering altering his proposed distribution policy. Originally he said he would give each congress man 50 copies of the paper and also place 50 at the. Hetzei Union desk. Upon reconsidering the policy, Simons said last night that he would place the copies in • the dining areas and in the HUB be fore the evening meal' on March 8. "The distribution policy was changed with the consideration that it would be mare evenly . and effectively distributed," he said. "We also decided to have about 2,000 copies printed with several hundred placed at the HUB, since many town men eat their evening meal there." S MONS HAD originally planned to _print about 1.500 copies. If Congress approves the news paper, Simons said. he plans to publish it every other week , with the issues coming out on Thurs days. Shades of the Old West TAIPING, North Malaya .(JP)— Five thieves blended new and old to stage a holdup at a local tin mine. They were armed with dag gers and spears and made off with $l.OOO worth of ore in a truck. .• COLLEGE STUDENTS: Part Time 15 Hourxweeidy to do promotion and advertising for the Min-Max Teething Meriting' Aiternoeu and. Evening Hours Only Salary $4O Call Mr. Carroll —AD 84001 ':BERMUDA By PAN-AM _ = MARCH' 17 - MARCH 25 FOR AN UNFORGETTABLE; UNINHIBITED EASTER VACATION 01111 BARRY FIREMAN AB 741133 - THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA then be submitted'to the school's administration, which will be ex pected to respect student opinion and take appropriate action, the article said. REPRESENTATIVES TO the Alfred Senate are elected from' living areas. Alfred University has six fra ternities on 'its campus, three 'of which have discriminatory clauses or racial and religious member ship requirements. One of the ithree is a local fraternity. The recent ruling on discrim ;illation was contained in an amendment to the constitution of ;the Student Senate which gave .that legislative body the power to review and veto any rule, laws or provisions of any other stu ,dent organization. A CLAUSE SIMILAR to the one paged by the Alfred student gov- . ernment was originally included' in the USG Constitution presented to the Senate Committee on Stu- 1 ( dent Affairs% this fall. It was stricken froth the constitution byl : the interim student government, upon the recommendation of the (Student Affairs Committee. Alpha Colony Pledges National Alpha Colony has officially been accepted as a pledge chapter] of Alpha ,Sigma Alpha national] sorority according to a telegram received Wednesday from the national organization by DorOthy IJ. Lipp, dean of women. The group itself has not yet had official notification, ,Jean Wright, corresponding secretary, said yesterday, so , there are no definite plans for formal pledging. The Senate Committee on Stu dent Affairs approed the charter s of the group as a colony Feb. 14 last year, and aprOved its peti tion to affiliate with Alpha Sigma Alpha earlier this ',term.. THE NATIONAL . sorority was founded in 1901 at what is now Longwood College in Farmville, .Va. Since that time its member ship-has grown to 41 active col legiate chapters. The new pledge chapter present- Baker Elected 'President Morris Baker, junior in political science from Harrisburg; was elected president of the Liberal Arts Student Council last week. Joyce Whitehead, junior in social welfare from Kennett Square, was elected vice presi dent. Roslyn Sklar, sophomore in political science from Walling ford, was elected recording secre tary. Marilee McClintock, sophomore in arts and letters from Maple wood, N.J., and Carol Hoffman, freshman in ails- and letters from) Valley Stream, N.Y., were elected corresponding secretary and treas- —caserian Photo by De Cokvaask PLAY IT - SWEET AND COOL"—Hon Waters, on trumpet. and Jesse Avery and Ditty Potter on saxophones, members:: of the Ron Waters Sextet froM Harrisburg, perform for the first jazz club workshop of the term Sunday in the Hetzel Union ballroom. The Kenny Kuhn Quintet, local jazz : group, featuring Kenny Lee sight, a Pittsburgh jazz , musician, also played at the workshop. ly has 36 full members find" 29 pledges. • • In other sorority developments, the Senate Committee on Student' Affairs revoket . i. the• University's charter of Beta Sigma Omicron and rechartered the group -as Gamma Colony, Laurence H. Lattman, committee chairman said. Lattman added that this ' action was not a punitive thing but taken et• the group's request. Also, Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority is requesting full sorority privileges after more than a year's time of provisional status, Jan Wanner, Panhellenic president, announced. " _ TO HAVE THIS request granted the group's revised constitution must first go to the Senate Sub- Committee on Organizational Control:and then to the Senate Committee on' Student Affairs. Mrs. Richard Vanderpool, Pan- f Liberal Arts Council urer respectively. Ten outstanding seniors will be awarded citations at the annual Liberal Arts Council ' banquet March 8. Applicants for the awards will -be screened by a student-faculty committee. The council amended' its con stitution to require screening of candidates for council elections in the falL In the past the council has not screened applicants. CLASS RINGS MARK BUTLER Jeweler 111 EAST BEAVER Across From PostiOffiaa pins 7 charms 'Keys Medals Trophies YOU are being helped by .the Penn State Placement Service What are your 'obligations? , Do you have complete credentials? Are you eligible for one of the 40,000 jobs? What can you , expect in the teaching field today? Ansivers to thete questions and many more-at the PENN STATE BKKATION ASSOC . NM Feb. 2T 1:30 214 Boacke . . (inembendUp' s and nominations her officers) memben of the College of Education Welcome (irspftially you setnian) hellenic adviser, said the group was granted provisional status last year due to an unstable membership., Since then, she said, the group has increased to 31 members. Only. 16 members are required for the group to belong to the Panhellenic Council. Tatoosh Island, one mile off Olympic Penninsula is the ex treme northwest corner of the United States. The island's popu lation of 18 is made up of the members of the Coast Guard and weather stations which broadcast storm warnings to the mainland. t!C - fiT 11 di tins e -HELD OVER "Funniest Flick of the Y.er Bosley Crow.hers. N.Y. Times ROM HUDSON ir )1 DORIS DR( C ( 12// • IbNY RA N / /If( Rmigs•mrseam -" ' sumni at 1:30.3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 • NEXT ATTRACTION • Alec Guinness - Reds Russell - A MAJORITY OF OW . : , -..tii,.'t.'t4.A,.."i'i Tonilti - Ashes & Diamonds' •WED. & THURS 4 s u i cy ma ee K ELL Y vrad WOW, * ll =s Vilinir 'l/4swiiiikret TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1962 Police Report 3 Pudents - In Accidents Three accidents involving stu dents were reported by state and local police over the weekend. None of the mishaps 'resulted in injuries, but extensive damages were recorded. Three cars were involved in a collision early Saturday morning at the intersection of S. Pugh 'St. and E. Beaver Ave. A car operated by Richard Goldstein, senior, in arts and letters from Wynnewood, struck by a car driven by George S. Siekielski of Boonton, N.T. Siekielski had tried unsuccess fully to drive his car around - a [third vehicle at the intersection' [ after his car's brakes failed. SIEKEELSICI HIT both the I third car, driven-by Charles Salter 'Chambersburg and the Gold stein' car. Siekielski's car came to a halt against a tree near the northwest corner ofl the inter section. Damages to, all three cars totaled itbout4l.2oo. Later Saturiiay morning. Victor Riva, senior in , physics from Monessen, and Kambiz Yadegar, junior in electircal ?engineering from State College, collided in the 100 block of S. Garner St, due to simultankous skids. State College police estimated total; damages at $2,275. Early yesterday morning; Den nis Narehood, sophomore in busi ness administration from •ton, skidded on an icy patch on Rt. 322, about one mile east of Souls burg, and hit a tree. !Damages to his car were estimated at $4OO dollars by State Police at .Rock view. Rockwell Cancels Talk 'For the second time in two weeks, George Lincoln Rockwell, head a the. American Nazi party, cancelled a scheduled talk to be delivered from the; post office Isteps in Lewisburg. Rockwell said icy roads were the cause of this cancellation. The talk had first been postponed be cause the Nazi leader was suffer ing from the flu. STATE NOW -_1:30-5-&30 1 • 4 ACADEMY AWARDS MATINEE .90 EVENING $1.25 CRADLE BEACH (AMP located 30 miles from Buffalo, 11. Y. • A camp for physically handicapped and deprived 'chilchion MALE COUNSELORS NEEDED INTERVIEWS Tuesday, March 1 Further Information . anduspobatruente Official Student Aid 211 Willard
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers