VOL 63. No. 65" Difference in Philosophy/ Placement Service Move Cause Leetch Retirement Claiming that he differs with the administration on the •philosophy which- should guide the University Placement Service, George N. P. Leetch, placement director since 1943, yesterday said he will be retired April 1. “My retirement stems from a basic difference in philoso phy between what I think placement should-be, and what the administration apparently thinks,” Leetch said He said placement’s move to its present location in Temporary on Jan.' 8 was “the last straw.” “I think this change will defi nitely harm the image of the University held by the companies which come here' for interviews. I could not be a part of. this.” _ THE MOVE to Temporary was necessitated by the fire which gutted part of Graduate Hall last summer, Robert .G. Bernreuter, special assistant to the president for student affairs, said yester day. i Plans for. reassignment of offi ces in Qld'Main, announced May 17, 1062, called for the Placement Service to occupy the .part of Grad Hall which was later dam aged by fire. After the fire, Placement was assigned the quar ters in Temporary which it now occupies. ... of alleged space limi tations in the new quarters, Leetch said that “two of the com panies have cut out. interviewing non-technical people, for this year at least, because they need tech nical people more.” BERNREUTER said he had no knowledge of such a move. “I believe that the interviewers of the various companies will realize that these are temporary quarters made necessary by a.lire and not an attempt to reduce Sams Clarifies Froth By WINNIE BOYLE Any suspicion that an inten tional misrepresentation of fact took place in the Froth situation was allayed yesterday by Henry W. Sams, head of the Department of English.. The proposed constitution of the humor magazine included the head of the English department or his representative as one of two advisers. Andrea Buscanics, co-editor of the now defunct original Penn State Froth, had stated ,to the committee reviewing the consti tution that she had the assured co-operation of the English de partment-on the matter. ■ , . AS TIME neared for the Com mittee on Student Organizations to recommend final approval of the document, it was discovered Prexy Establishes Committee To Study Student Tensions A committee, to study the ten sions and pressures to .which a student is subjected has been es tablished by President Eric A. Walker, M. Nelson McGeary, as sistant to the president, said yesterday. - McGeary, who chairs the com mittee, explained that the group will not duplicate the work of the professors who are studying the term system, t “We are looking at all sorts of tensions,” he said, “from lack of sleep to family pressure on the student , who doesn’t really want to come to college.” ' : Explaining the procedure his committee is using, McGeary said they will first decide what the tensions are that bother the stu dent, if any. They- will then dis By MEL AXILBUND GEORGE N. P. LEETCH facilities or service,” he said. A permanent location for placement is under consideration, Bernreuter said, and' one. possi bility is the academic services building _ slated • for. the. eastern portion of the campus. ; Leetch said he is now on leave. The Board of Trustees, how hold ing its annual meeting in Harris burg, will decide today what fur ther status will be given Leetch. that the English department did not want to be associated with .the magazine. ; ' . VI don’t think she (Miss Bus canics) was trying to pull the wool, over anyone’s eyes,” Sams said, “as It was too innocently done.” - In elaborating on the situation, Sams said, he. felt this was a case where Miss . Buscanics “so ardent ly desired” to get the magazine back on its. feet that when the English department said “no,” she heard a "yes." This probably happened, he said, because of the department’s general encouragement for all efforts to re-establish the maga zine, QUESTIONING the Univer sity’s requirements that a maga zine should have a control board, cuss and try to-recommend defi nite procedures to President Walker. “We are not very far along yet,” McGeary said. “Right' now we’re-just .talking .and listening to students and administrators who' are directly connected with students; such as associate deans, health center personnel and fac ulty.” . McGeary said his committee’s report, will -probably- be :sub mitted to Walker about March 1. Penny-A-Minute Night ' . Penny-A-Minule Night will be held tonight. Coeds may stay out until 2 a.m. by paying a penny for each minute after 1 a.m. - • UNIVERSITY. PAR*. PA’.. SATURDAY MORNING,. JANUARY 26. 1963 Stennis To Buildup in - WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. . John'Stennis, D-Miss., Said yester day his Senate Preparedness sub committee will investigate what he sees as a-"rapid-buildup of military might in,Cuba"—a situa tion which many Republicans claim is a grave military threat to this nation. -The Mississippian thus, in ef fect, sided with those who claim the Soviet missile withdrawal of last autumn did not end the Com munist-run..island’s menace to the United States. And the move appeared to ar ray him against the views of Pres ident Kennedy who only Thursday told a news conference there has been no recent offensive buildup in Cuba. Stennis acted a few hours after administration leaders had given a . secret briefing to the Senate’s Latin-American Affairs subcom mittee. A Republican senator emerged from’ that briefing to bear down anew on his party’s theme of a Cuban military peril and he re ceived some support from a Dem ocratic colleague. ' Stennis set no date for the hear ings by ' his ■ subdivision of the -Aimed Services' Committee but said "reports, .which have come to me indicate that the continued presence and buildup of military might in Cuba is rapidly convert ing .Castro’s forces into the sec ond most powerful military power in this hemisphere. "Since these forces were con trolled by the hostile rulers of Communist Russia it is impera tive' that we examine carefully tKe military aspects of the Cuban situation from the standpoint of the threat which it poses to our security and the state of our own military preparedness to meet and counter this threat,” Stennis said. Sams asked: “Why shouldn’t stu dents be allowed to say and print anything they want to, the same as every other'citizen?” He said he would like to see' a local application of state and na tional principles concerning free dom of expression. This ■is related" to his reasons for declining the position of- an adviser. He has stated that he does not want to act in a censor ship role. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Mixup ”• - - - —Collegian Photo by Wutf Knauecnberger BEATNIK HAVENi Members of the Wesley (11 lh-elecirical engineering -Monroeville), 'The Foundation last night participated in a Beatnik Rev. William Watson, director of student ac pariy- featuring poetry, jazz and "expresso." iivilies, and Penny Low (2nd-home economics- Shdwn above, from left, are Kathleen Brill Williamsport). (2nd-liberal arls-Red Bank, N.J.), George Myers Sens. George D, Aiken, V-Vt., and Stuart Symington, D-Mo., also made clear to newsmen their ap prehensions were not stilled at the secret briefing by Secretary of State Dean ■ Rusk and John A. McCone, director of the Central Intelligence Agency. But the subcommittee chair man, Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore„ supported the view expressed Thursday by President Kennedy that there has been no significant buildup of offensive power in the Communist-ruled island since So viet withdrawal of nuclear weap ons last autumn. Morse said the session was top secret and he refused to tell re porters what Rusk and McCone reported. Increasing Thefts Among Students Considered Alarming by Campbell Theft of University and student equipment as well’ as personal property has been increasing at an “alarming rate," Stanley .H. Campbell, vice president for busi ness, said yesterday. Campbell noted the vastness of articles stolen by citing a recent theft which involved equipment worth $7OO and clothing valued at $500.' . Among the items confiscated by the police when the thieves were apprehended were microscopes, balance weights, drawing instru ments, walkie-talkie radios, an electric blower, books (including expensive and limited editions of literature and science), skis and ski poles, tape recorders, records, scales, dishes, a typewriter, clocks and a stop watch. CAMPBELL said that these thefts are frequent and not iso lated cases. “In most cases,” he explained, “the thefts are made relatively easy by lack of simple security measures by faculty and staff members or students responsible for the items.” He suggested several measures to reduce the opportunity for ar ticles to be taken: • Lock empty office's and lab oratories, no matter how short a time they will be vacant. • Question a person’s' right to be in certain areas if their pres ence is not legitimate at first glance. • Take care in leaving personal Probe Cuba Sen. Herbert H. Humphrey, D- Minn., the assistant Senate ma jority leader, also told newsmen that Rusk and McCone “stand by the President’s report of Thursday that since October only ono So viet ship that might have been bearing military supplies has docked in Cuba." But Aiken said he “thinks Russia has built an enormously strong military and political base in Cuba, much stronger than it was six months ago." The strengthening of this military political fortress is continuing, he added. Aiken brushed aside queries about whether he believes nuclear weapons remain in Cuba. items in unattended places. Hall way racks in classroom buildings should not be used when halls are likely to be empty. • Never -leave pocketbooks or wallets in offices or laboratories. Campbell stressed that each person must "develop a con sciousness of the need for effec tive security measures." 20 Coeds Accept Open Rush Bids Twenty more coeds have ac cepted bids from nine sororities bringing the total number of coeds who have been ribboned since the beginning of the open bid period to 57. Alpha Epsilon Phi and Pi Beta Phi have filed their quota leaving 17 sororities still eligible to extend open bids, Those ribboned are Alpha Kap pa Alpha, Joyce Collier, Patricia Hamel, Joyce Mahan and Marian Simms; Alpha Sigma Alpha, Sally Ann Aughinbough, Susan Bayley, Dorothy Matthews, Sarah Wil liams and Diane Yorly; lota Alpha Pi, Elaine Felsenfeld and Sarilyn Brass. Phi Mu, Joyce Herr; Phi Sigma Sigma, Joan Eisenberg, Carol Linde and Linda Messer; Pi Beta Phi, Ann Patterson; Sigma Sigma Sigma, Barbara Schaefer; Theta Phi Alpha, Susan Maynes; Zeta Tau Alphas Diane Kapes. FIVE CENTS