PAGE TWO Composers of Thespian Seek Second. Consecutive Hit By JAKE HIGHTON “A really great score com posed by Frank Lewis and David Weiner”—that was a reviewer’s opinion of ‘Some Punkins,” first show written 'last spring by Thes pians’ student musical comedy team. Tomorrow night at Schwab Auditorium this Weiner-Lewis duo will have their latest pro duction, “Bottoms, Up,” open a three-night run. Although writers are often un able to follow up an initial suc cess with another, it is highly possible that this Penn State musical combination which turned out fine tunes in their first show like “Boaring Twenties” and “True As Ever Any Sweetheart,” may have come up with another hit. As to the lives and activities of Dave Weiner and Frank Lewis,- about the only difference between them is that Dave writes words and Frank music. Both men are seventh semester seniors in Commerce and Finance. Both are Phi Sigma, Delta frater nity brothers, both members of Skull and Bones, of course both are Thespians, and they live with in a few blocks of each other in the Wynnefield section of Phila delphia. . , This closeness of association and interest helped them this summer to work late at night— after daytime jobs—to write their second musical comedy effort, ‘‘Bottoms Up.” This musical comedy revue will probably be the only show produced by Thespians this year which is entirely student writ LA Council to Support Promotion Agency Plan At the Liberal Arts Student Council meeting held Monday night, the council voted unanimously to support the recommendation of the All-College Cabinet committee to establish a central promotion agency on campus. Edward Shanken, president of the council, will propose to cab inet an amendment to the CPA recommendation, made by the council. The amendment states that a trial period be set up, not to exceed two semesters, at the end of which the agency will be investigated to see that there are no infringements being made on outside organizations. CPA Pros and Cons After discussion on the pros and cons of such an agency the council members said that such an organization might well be, used to liven up promotion and to give students primarily inter ested in promotion work an op portunity for expression. At the same time some members felt that such an agency would tend to usurp promotion groups of other campus organizations. In voting'to support the CPA recommendation, the council moved to stress the cabinet ap proval clause of the recommen dation stating that only cabinet committees could use CPA ser vices. Other organizations served would be at the discretion of CPA and would have to be cab inet approved. Freshman Nominations Nominations for freshman rep resentatives to the Liberal Arts Student Council will be held next Monday through Friday. To become a nominee, a fresh man must get 25 freshman names s on a petition and enter it at the liberal arts office in 133 Sparks. Elections will be held Oct. 30 and 31. Shanken appointed Wil liam Harrol and Lois Pulver co chairmen of the elections com mittee, Other appointments to com mittees are Ronald Eisenberg, bloodmobile; Barbara Klopp, Re ligion in Life Week; and Jay Headly, international understand ing committee. Reporting on the international understanding committee meet ing, Guy a Woodward told the council' of its plans for the UN day program to be held next Wednesday. ■ Other members of the lUC are John Baron, Hardy Williams, Ann Quigly, and Jay Headly. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE PENNSYLVANIA ten. The other shows staged dur ing the school year are usually Broadway hits of the past. Lyric writer Weiner began his Thespian career as a dancer in the shows, “Welcome Willie” and “Girl Crazy” performed during season. Prior to that, Dave directed his Overbrook High School senior class show. Dave, president of his frater nity and Broth feature writer, plans to enter law school after Hort Show Will Feature Coed Queen Besides the dedication of the 38th annual Horticulture Show to Dr. Warren B. Mack, head of the horticulture department at the College, the show will fea ture the appearance of Pennsyl vania’s Vegetable Queen of 1951 at 2 p.m. Sunday. She is Hilda Hogeland, a sopho more in home economics. A delegation' of . the Pennsyl vania Vegetable Growers Associ ation will honor Queen Hilda. Representatives of the School ■ of Agriculture and the horticulture department will join, with offi cers of the association in honor ing her. The officials who plan to at tend the affair with the Queen are Frank H. Worssam, Rutledge, coordinator for the Pennsylvania and National Vegetable Growers; Fred H. Brehm, Dilltown, presi dent of the state association; H. Brinton Gerhart, Martinsburg, secretary; and Gilbert S. Watts, Bellwood, past president. The lat ter is a son of former Dean R. L. Watts, who started the first Horti culture Show on campus. Guess The Score Of The Game By Quarters MICHIGAN STATE vs. PENN STATE W—l—N $lO. FREE LAUNDRY PENN STATE LAUNDRY 320 W. Beaver Avenue Phone 3261 Show June graduation. Aside from having written the music for “Bottoms Up,” Prank directs the glee singers and drills the chorus line. He has acted and sung in previous Thespian performance^. Prank, formerly of Central High School, is now vice president of Thespians. He is taking some music courses now, in case he doesn’t stick eiitirely to his busi ness plans in the future. West Dorm Thefts Cause $5O Loss For News Agency See Editorial Page 4 Theft of small change amount ing to almost $5O from the Stu dent News Agency in the West Dorms was reported yesterday by Burton Johns, student mana ger. The thefts- started Oct. 8, Johns said, and have been continuing at the rate of from $6 to $7 a day. Although minor sums have been missing from the agency’s other newspaper stands, Johns re ported, almost all of the missing funds have been traced to the West Dorms. Under the arrangements used by the SNA, students may pick up the papers-and pay for-them. The agency does not have an employee attending the papers. Not more than two or three people are involved in the thiev ery, Johns said. He reported, however, that last week’s loss put the agency in the red for the week. The agency employs about 15 students. The agency is operating as a service to students, Johns said, but if the thefts continue, it will be forced to close. In addition to the stand in the West Dorms, the agency operates newsstands in the Nittany-Pol lock dining halls, the TUB, and Simmons, McElwain, and Ath erton Halls. Prexy Is Seal Trustee President Milton S. Eisenhower, as trustee-at-large of the Easter Seal Agency, reassumed his posi tion at the 30th annual convention in Chicago recently. . ' „ ' Composed of more than 2,000 state and local member societies, the Seal Agency is a national society for crippled children and adults. Workshop Fraternity ' The flfst phase of the Inter-Fraternity Council workshop pro gram will get underway Oct. 31 with a series of discussions and dinners designed to create better understanding of and find solu tions for fraternity problems. - - Thomas Bradrick, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, will introduce and ex plain the program at the IPC meeting at 7 tonight in 219 EE. The dinners will, be, held in eight of Penn State’s; 48 frater nity houses, and'each dinner will be attended by one member from each fraternity. The fraternities have been divided into eight geo graphical groups with five and six houses in' each group. Groups to Meet . Those houses having the din ners will send their members to the other fraternities in their geographical group for that meal. This" phase of the program' will involve the mass migration of approximately 750 fraternity men. '. ; ' Churchill Is Topic Of Debaters By BETTIE LOUX Winston Churchill was called the “greatest living citizen of the free world,” a “party politician,” and a “master of the art of war” last night as Penn State and Ox ford University students battled through the annual international debate. Brilliant digs and repartee, for which traveling British debaters are becoming known, were neatly interspersed with arguments for and agairfst the question, Re solved: That the return of Mr. Churchill as prime minister would be highly regrettable. Richard Oxford’s affir mative speaker, opposed Church ill’s return not only because of the man himself, but because it would mean the end of the Labor government’s work. The facts that production in England is now 40 percent higher than before the war, that there is no unemploy ment, and that Britain gave the Iranian problem to the UN for arbitration, Taveme said, are il lustrations of the Labor govern ment’s achievements. No Longer 'Torch' David Lewis, Penn State’s negative speaker, compared the austerity of 121 Sparks with the life of the English, who now eat “fish and chips” under the Labor government. This was later con tradicted by Clair George, Penn State,- who said they have been eating them “for a century.” Contending that the Labor Par ty is no longer the “torch in the it was in 1945, Lewis denied that the Conservatives are against all that Labor does. This, he said, is not “me-tooism” —it is honesty. The conservative program would include the denationaliza tion of iron and steel, an excess profits tax and. extension of the public health program, he said. Answering Lewis’ accusation that Attlee suffered from lumba go, George mentioned Churchill’s poor hearing. “If I were Stalin,” he said, “I’d rather talk to a man with lumbago than one that couldn’t hear.” Lose Principles George contended that the Con servative Party has lost its prin ciples, as evidenced by its ad vocation of an excess profits tax. Churchill, he said, is not a “mas ter of diplomacy,” and the return of the Conservative Party would be a threat to the peace of the world. Social reforms enacted by the Conservatives before 1945 , were cited by lanky Oxfordian William Rees-Mogg, who mentioned the tearing down of slums and distri bution of free milk. AIM Alumni Dance The Association of Independ ent Men will sponsor an alumni dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the West Dorm lounge. * The dance will be open to all independent undergraduates and alumni- • Delicious I liubieh WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1951 to Treat Problems The houses holding dinners will also hold discussion meet ings on Nov. 1 and 2. Each dis cussion group ill deal with problems facing one of the eight house committees and the chair men of these committees will be present at the discussion. Topics and Locations Location of the meetings and the topics for discussion are as follows: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, adminis tration; Phi Gamma Delta, rush ing;,' Theta Chi, scholarship; Phi Kappa Psi, pledge training; Beta Sigma Rho, finance; Alpha Gam ma Rho T public relations; Phi Kappa, social, and Delta Chi, house maintenance. On Nov. 3, the discussion chairman and IFC leaders will meet in Old Main for a report meeting where views and deci sions will be consolidated. Banquet Climax The annual IFC-AFC banquet at the Nittany Lion Inn that night will climax the workshop program’s , first phase. Here, an over-all view based on the report meeting will be presented. Chap ter presidents, IFC representa tives, fraternity counselors, dis cussion chairmen, and college of ficials , will attend • the banquet Tribunal Hears Traffic, Dorm Violation Cases Four traffic violators and four ■violators of dormitory regula tions appeared before Tribunal last night. The first action brought up a delayed case. The offender had ignored his first summons from Tribunal, claiming he was inno cent in an incident which in volved the smearing of jelly on walls, a door, and floors in the West Dorms. The sentence was a recom mendation by the group that the violator be placed on probation with the Dean of Men’s office for one semester. .Tribunal also rec ommended tha t' no permanent black mark be made on the man’s record and that no letter be sent to his parents concerning the mat ter! The other dormitory violation involved ■ three West Dorm men. This case had started out as teas ing which got out of hand, ending with water being splashed , and poured around and the ‘ throw ing of hard-boiled eggs. . All three offenders admitted their guilt and said they- would assume the responsibility for any damage they had done to the dorms. Their sentence was a se (Continued on page three) , Birthday Cakes with that home-made taste . . . a real treat ' % • Also • : j| Cream Puffs, Patty Pastries | Electric Bakery § Allen Street j|