PAGE. TWO Opened by Lion Party. Clique Fails to Nominate Class Candidates Although nominations for All- College and junior and senior class of fic e r s were officially opened Sunday night by Ray Evert, chairman of the Lion Party, no nominations were made by the approximate 100 students in attendance. The party held opening nomin ations for chairman of the fresh man and sophomore class cliques at the meeting. Thomas Umholtz was the sole nominee for sopho more class clique chairman, while Norman Levin was the sole nom inee for freshman class clique chairman. Nominations To Close The new Lion Party constitu tion requires that a new chairman from the freshman and sophomore classes be elected each spring. Closing nominations and elections for these offices will take place at next week's meeting. Nominations for All-College and junior and senior class officers for the spring elections will be closed at next Sunday's meeting. Evert also announced that voting on the candidates will take place at that time. Platform Begun Sunday night's meeting was the last meeting for students to sign membership lists. If that was a student's first meeting, attend ing next Sunday's meeting will make a student eligible to vote in the party nominations, Evert announced. To be eligible to vote in the nominations, a person must have attended at least two clique meetings. This ruling is set up in the All-College elections code. The Lion Party began work on its platform for the spring elec tions. At Sunday night's meeting, interested students were asked by Evert to sign up to work on the committee. Grid Banquet To Roast 100 Personalities Approximately 100 College and town personalities will be "roasted" at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Nittany Lion Inn during the course of the 13th annual Gridiron Banquet. Tickets for the affair may be , picked up until 5 p.m. today at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Tickets are priced at $3. Moylan Mills, president of Sig ma Delta Chi, national profes sional j o urn alism fraternity, which is sponsoring the lampoon dinner, reminded invited guests that invitations to the banquet must be shown at the Student Union desk in order to get the tickets. • Seven satirical skits will be pre sented at the dinner. President Milton S. Eisenhower and Louis H. Bell, director of public infor mation, will be guests of honor. Navy Air Program To Be Explained Lt. j.g. Herbert Taft, USNR January graduate, is on campus this week to. explain the Naval Air Cadet program to interested persons. . Taft will be available at the West Dorms this afternoon. To morrow he will be at the Nittany- Pollock dorm area in the after noon, and will show , movies and present a brief explanation of the program at 7:30 p.m. in 200 Engi neering E. Thursday and Friday afternoons he will be in 204 A Engineering E. For further information, call 4979: MacDermott Assigned To Newfoundland Duty - Cpl. Raymond G. MacDermott, who was a student at the. College, has been assigned to Pepperrell Air Force Base, • Newfoundland, as an apprentice, clerk. The 22-year old airman entered the Air Force late in 1950. He was transferred to Pepperrell fr o m Hamilton Air Force Base, , Cal. Senior, Junior Posts State, Lion Parties . John Barwick Secretary Of YMCA Will Speak John Barwick, world secretary for the YMCA in the Middle East, will be the guest speaker at a coffee hour sponsored by t h'e Penn State Christian Association at 4 p.m. today in 304 Old Main. Barwick will also speak at the Christian Association Forum at 7 tonight in 304 Old Main, and will lead classroom discussions today and tomorrow on invitation. There will be a luncheon meet ing ' with Barwick at the State College . Hotel at 12:15 p.m. to morrow. The cost will be $1.25. Reservations can be made by call ing 8441, extension 541, by noon today. These meetings are open to anyone interested in obtaining di rect information from the Middle East. Barwick was associated with the YMCA in Jerusalem, and dur ing the second World War served as secretary for Services to Pris oners of War in Great Britain and Western Europe. Since then he has been secretary of the YMCA in the Middle East and is stationed at Beirut, Lebanon. Barwick received his B.A. from Mount Morris and his M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania. He took graduate work at the Uni versity of Chicago, after which he served as head of the History department of York Collegiate Institute. He is a native of York, Pennsylvania. Statue Has Lead In Kluger Play A marble statue that talks is one of the main characters in this afternoon's Five O'clock Theater show, "Higher and Higher Down," by Renee Kluger. Miss Kluger, a sixth-semester arts and letters major, wrote the fantasy in Warren S. Smith's Dramatics 21 class last fall. It will be presented script-in-hand at 5 p.m. today in the Little Thea ter, basement of Old Main. The cast includes Arch Rugh, a man; John Aniston, Romeo; Nancy Levit, Julia; Velma Kai ser, Kitty; Roland Johnson, Peter; and Betty Lou Morgan and Kath ryn Scheetz, rope jumpers. Marcia Yoffe is technical di rector, and Frank Baxter will as sist her. John Pakkanen will di rect. Five O'clock Theater plays are free and ,o Gen to the •üblic. Krumrine Bike Shop Er. 433 W. College Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLNGE. PENNSYLVANIA Laubach, Griffith, Wright Nominated By _State Party John Laubach, president of the Association of Independent Men, was nominated Sunday night as the State Party candidate for the office of All-College president in the approaching spring elections. No other nominations for that office were made at the meeting, which approximately 275 at tended. - Other All-College nominations made Sunday were Ho wa r d Wright and Theodore Kimmel for vice president, and William Grif fith for secretary-treasurer. James Plyler and Margaret Hep ler were nominated. for senior class president and secret ar y treasurer respectively. In the junior class race, Rich ard Gibbs, Warren Haffner, and Richard Lemyre were nominated for the office of president. Lem yre declined the presidency nom ination following his nomination for the position of vice president. Also nominated for vice president was William Wagner. Ann Quig ley was nominated for the junior class secretary-treasurer post. Further nominations and elec tions will be held at next Sunday's clique in e e tin g. Nordinating speeches are also scheduled to be made at that time. Platform Suggestions ' Thomas Farrell, clique chair man, pointed out that only those students who ' have attended at least one clique meeting would be eligible for admittance to the Sunday meeting. A ruling by the All-College elections committee holds that the party workshop meetings cannot be counted toward clique membership. Farrell also requested that any suggestions for the party platform be given to Melvin Rubin or Joseph Simone, co-chairmen of the workshop platform commit tee. Jerome Feinburg and Cor inne Janssens were appointed party co-historians by Farrell: Al bert Lucidi was appointed chair man of a mixer to be held during the election campaign. Episcopal Pastor Gets New Duties The Rev. John N. PeabOdy, pas tor of St; Andrew's Episcopal Church, will leave today for Balti more to assume the duties of rector of the Pro-Cathedral and Church of the Incarnation. Rev. Peabody will also work with Episcopal students at John Hop kins University. Rev. Peabody served as chair man of Religion-in-Life Week this year. He is founder of the Church Door Canteen and St. Andrew's Day School, which serves the parish and community. He has served as president of the State College Ministerium and as co-chairman of the Community Development Committee. PSCA Sets Cabin Party for Frosh Students interested in attend ing the Penn State Christian As sociation freshman cabin party may register in 304 Old Main before 12 noon Friday, by making a 50 cent deposit. • The party, to be held on March 29 and 30, will' be limited to 15 women and 15 men. Cost for the weekend, which includes three meals, is $1.25. The group will leave from the rear of Old Main at 1:30 ..m. March 29. ng.iime &he AND NOW IS THE TIME ...TO SEE newly reconditioned bikes . . . repainted and overhauled with new and genuine parts. Buy one of these lightweight or balloon tire bikes for as, low as $l5 Three Nominated Phone 4723 WSGA Presidentictl Candidates MEE Yvonne • Carter Joan Hutehon Gallant Galant Gleefully Gulps Greek's Goldfish In a throwback to the roaring 20's. Raymond Galant, eighth semesterjournalisni senior, showed his fraternity brothers the tech nique of swallowing a goldfish. Unlike the youth of the 20's, however, - Galant didn't perform the deed as a stunt. It all started when a fraternity brother, Norman Fleekop, offered Galant $5 to dispose of the fish, owned by another fraternity bro ther, Marvin Cotler. After stripping down to the waist, Galant, surrounded by an anxious herd of fraternity broth ers, lifted the fish to his mouth and consumed it along with a glass of water, as the fraters cheered. "It was easier than I expected," Galant said after the experience. To prove that claim he has a standing offer to do it again" for $2.50." Cattle Fitting, Showing A fitting and showing demon stration of dairy cattle by Charles Brosius, manager of the dairy sci ence exposition, will be presented at 7 tonight in the Livestock Judging Pavilion. A golf ball leaves the club at a speed of about 180 feet per sec ond when hit by the average golf er. TUESDAY, MARCO Z 9, IJIfZ • THREE OF' THE 47 WOMEN who will vie in primary elec tions today for six Women's Student Goveknment AsSOcia tion and three Women's Recre-... ation Association offices. Offices to• be votes on are WSGA president, vice presi dent, treasurer, senior senatoi, junior senator, sophomore sena tor,- and all WRA offices. All coeds are eligible to vote for president, vice president, and all' WRA offices. In addition, 'juniors are eligible to vote for senior senator, sophomores for-. junior senator, and. freshmen for sophomore senator. Press Freedom To Be Topic Of Radio Show "Freedom of the Press in Our Modern World" is the topic .of this week's "More Information Please" radio program, which will be broadcast over WMAJ at 9:15. p.m. today, David Mackey, as sistant 'professor of speech, said yesterday. Guest speakers who will be interviewed are Robert M. Pock rass, assistant professor of jour nalism, and Frederick B. Marbut, professor of journalism. The program, which will" ast 15 minutes, will delve more deep ly into the problems underlying the freedom of the press :in our civilization. Tonight's prograM will - bring out some of the crimps India and' Russia are putting in the UN's proposed world code for the free exchange of information. The responsibility that the press owes the world will be discussed as well as other current problems of the press. This is the second of a series of programs which are going be hind the headlines to bring out the realization of the significance of certain news events. Each week a nine -man committee se lects a topic for the -program. Nitiany Council Approves Ag Fee The Nittany Council last night approved a recommendation by a 14 to two vote that all students be assessed 25 cents for the" sup port' of the Penn State Intercol legiate Judging Team. The \pro posal is before All-College cab inet.
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