MI Fee Plan • Not Justified= See 'Page 4 VOL. 52, No. 131 Senate to Consider Class Excuse Plan Under the proposed revisions to the Regulations ~ for Under graduate Students to be discussed at the College, Senate meeting Thursday, all excuses for absence from classes will be "official" and will be, honored by instructors. In addition, changes have been suggested providing' for dis ciplinary probation, and requiring approval of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women for the location of social functions. The rule revisions provide tor excuses for, authorized athletic trips, inspeCtion• trips, student organization trips, hospital con finement, and for personal emer gencies requiring absence from the College. Excuses will not be issued from either the dispensary or the out-patient department of the College Infirmary. Hospital Excuses Six Schools Set Council Elections Six • schools will hold council elections early next week. The Schools of Agriculture and Phy sical Education are not holding elections. Time and place of the elections with the candidates include: Chemistry and Physics Chemistry and Physics Student Council .members will be elected Monday, • Tuesday, and Wednes day in the lobby of Osmond Lab oratory., A junior in chemical engineer ing, one in science, and two in pre-med; tw o sophomores in chemical engineering, one in phy sics, and one in pre-med; and freshmen in chemical engineering and pre-med will be elected to the' council. Nominees .for the junior chemical en gineering post are Joseph Leitinger, Rol and Messori, Richard Moran, William Pres ' ton, and Duane Remsnyder. Janet Herd, Peter Lansbury, Irving Melnick, and Jus tine Strolis are the pre-med juniors nom , inated. Samuel Engle is the only science student nominated. •Sophomores from chemical engineering are Al Beane, William Deppe, Harry Frey, Gerry GilliSpie, Lawrence Klevans, and Walter -Pregnion. .Pre-med sophomores nominated are Marilyn Busby, Robert Con iff, Nevin Rupp, and Charles Signorino. Gilbert Unangst is the 'only sophothore physics nominee. Freshman chemical engineering candi dates are James Angstadt, Robert Such wpm, George Fitting, Evans Goodling, John Hogan, Kenneth-Kresge, James Leslie, and 'John McNeill. Ronald Cohn, Harvey Hall man, Raymon Maims, Charles Stone, and George •Wright are the freshmen pre-med nominees: , The selective system of electing students from certain departments 'is prescribed in the council con stitution which requires.that rep resentation on the council. , be ap portioned according to the number of students enrolled in each cur riculum. No chemists have been nominated because their percent, age quota on, the counciPis filled. Education Election of senior, junior, and sophomore representatives in the School of Education will be held Monday, Tuesday, and Wednes day in . Burrowes Building. , Education juniors nominated to run for the posts of senior representative on the Education Student Council are Charles Brill, Donna Rae Estabrook, Forrest Frei er,' Richard Hamilton, Anne Jennings, Sally Lou Jones, Eleanor Mazis, Carolyn (Continued on page two) • Livestotk Show Opens The 35th Little International Livestock Show• will take place today , in the Livestock Judging Pavilion. The exposition begins at 8 a.m. and will be climaxed by the annual banquet and presen tation of awards to be held at 7 tonight at‘the Auto Port. • This annual show, sponsored by-the Penn State chapter of the Block and Bridle Club; is a stu dent livestock contest with prizes for "fitting and showing. More than 100 students from all the - • / "•-r '•r TODAY'S 'WEATHER CLEARING AND WARMER -A44 rrc;" By BILL JOST Dr. Herbert R. Glenn, director .of the College Health Service, said that many students had been taking advantage of the dispen sary excuse to miss ' classes or bluebooks. He explained that stu dents taking advantage of the dis- I pensary excuse caused the waste of much time and money, and did not add to the moral fibre of the students. Dr. Glenn said that excuses will be issued for students in .the College Hospital and for students ill at home who present a doc ,tor's statement.. Under the proposed plans, ex cuses issued for absence must be honored by instructors. An offi cial excuse will permit the stu dent to make up required work and examinations without pen alty. ( For inspection trips listed in a student's 'curriculum, the head of the department will issue an ex cuse. _The degn of the school 'in which a coursels - faiight - Will issue excuses for trips incidental to a course. Reported Absences The Dean of Men and the Dean of Women, under the proposed revisions, will issue excuses in case of personal emergency and for student organization trips not otherwise provided for. The Sen ate .committee on student 'affairs will determine whether excuses are advisable for student organ ization trips. Instructors will be required to report each case of three un exenSed- absences-to the student's dean, - who - in turn will report if to the• Dean of Men or the Dean of Women. This provision is in practice now, although it is not being followed by all instructors. H. K. Wilson, dean of men, said that the practice of . reporting three unexplained absences is in the interest of student _welfare. Dean Wilson said that this sys tem is a check on any unfortunate incidents that may befall a stu dent, and also acts as a check on scheduling mixups. Proposed revisions to the pro- bation section of the regulations (Continued on page three) schools on campus have : entered animals in the competition, • Dor lin Hay, • show manager,--:, - said. This is the largest number =of en tries ever recorded, and the ex= position is., expected to attract capacity crowds, ..Hay added. • Animals to be judged include sheep, horses, and ' beef cattle from the College purebred herds and flocks. • The show will run continuously from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m. The sheep :division will open the program with the showing and judging of Cheviot, South down, Dorset, Shorpshire, and Hariipshire breeds. Superinten dent for the division pis Ralph Yergey, and the judge will be David, McDoWell of Mercer. Win ners will ,be selected in each class. In the beef cattle division,, ten classes will be shown including Angus. lierefordi and Shorthorn). FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 26, 1952 College to Honor Students,Alumni The Trouble Starts BILL SULLIVAN (left), as Richard Kurt, is welcomed by Marion Froude, played by Fran Stridinger, while Leander Nolan, portrayed by Morris Sarachek, loaks on contemptuously. Kurt is there to persuade Miss Froude to write her autobiography which will 'consequently involve Nolan, an ex-lover and Congressional candidate. Audience Responds Warmlyto' Biography Players, determined to end their '5l-52 Center Stage season on a cheery note, last night: opened "Biography" to an, intimate first-night audience which responded warmly to S. N. Behrman's concoction of wit "and sentimentality. • Tickets for tonight's performance are on sale for $1.25 at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Sharp banter and an edge of satire combined with a plot of serious undertones added up to a play that, were it half-an-hour shorter; • would make for a fully satisfying evening. If the Players had built up 'to the ' climaxes rather than play ing just about all the action on the same level, the two-and-a half hours of sophistication would have been ,less trying. The conflict between laissez faire tolerance and extriine...radi. calism is woven in t bright story concerning a vibrant, devil may-care artist whose affairs with Statesmen all over the world have brought her into the spOtligViir notoriety. Fran Stridinger gives a fine breeds. James Gallagher, awards chairman, said that for the first time, special awards will be pre sented to the best fitters and showmen in each breed. 'niter Welker is superhitendent of this division and Arthur Maness of New Paris will judge. Morgan, Pereheron, and Bel gian breeds will be shown in the horse • division. Division superin tehdent is George Worst and judge will be Harold C1ark.....0f Meadowbrook Farms, Rochester, Mich. Following the selection of Win ners in each class, the champion fitter and showman of the horse and sheep divisions will be selected. A champion fitter and showman for each breed of beef cattle will then be chosen, one of which will be selected as champion fitter and another as champion showman of the divi sion. Finally a grand champion (Continued on page two) By BETTIE LOUX performance as tolerant Marion Froude, whose distress at finding a bitter magazine editor wants to use her, tell-tale - biography to de stroy those whom he hates gives the play a pathos not always found in high comedy. Bill Sullivan is especially good as the -hard-bitten editor who condemns Marion's tolerance of all kinds of people as "sloppy aziness." For the guy who started off Marion on her career -of light hearted prostitution, No 1 a n,' as. ,created . , by the aitthor, is unbe lievably easily shocked .by - her 'current affairs. Not that it is any great fault—for "Bunny" Nolan, with all his prudishness and pom posity, is, an excellent butt for Kurt's barbed remarks. The role is handled capably by Morris Sarachek. Carol Grosky has a German ac cent down just about pat' for her role as the stiff-legged maid Min nie. . Ivan Ladizinsky, as the musician Melchoir Feydak, handle s, his lines wit h 'a quiet amusement very reminiscent of his role in "Hedda Gabler." Technical production as a whole . is fairly good, w i't h low-slung chairs and black enameled tables tastefully combined with pieces of oriOntal art ito give an air of comfortable urbanity to Marion's. New York studio. It is unfortunate in the second act that the easel, which holds a remarkably clever likeness of Sarachek, is placed so that •only one side of the audience can see it. 1 Miss Stridinger's costumes are (Continued on page eight) tgiatt Photo by Austin What About the Lost 55 Per Cent? See Page 4 Laubach Installation On Monday • All-College Pres i d e n t-elect John Laubach will be installed, 12 students and five alumni of the College will receive awards, and Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority will be cited for scholarship at the second annual Honors Day program at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Schwab Auditorium. President Milton S. Eisenhower will present the introductory ad dress at the program, which is open to the public. The oath of office will be ad ministered to Laubach by David Mutchler, chairman of Tribunal, following remarks by James Worth, retiring All-College presi dent. The first two rows in, the auditorium will be reserved for in-coming an d out-going All- College Cabinet members. To Award Pugh Medals Dr. Robert L. Weber, chairman of the Senate Committee on Scholarships and Awards, will present the John W. White medal to Jean Black, the John W. White fellowship to Ralph Clark, and the President Sparks medal to Richard Grostefon. Evan Pugh medals will be pre sented by Dr, Agnes McElwee, associate professor of English composition and president of the (Continued on, page eight) Glee Club To Perform Tomorrow Robert Klug, pianist; Laßue Durrwachter, tenor; and Thomas Lewis, tenor,' will appear with the men's Glee Club on the pro gram scheduled for 3 p.m. to morrow in Schwab Auditorium. The Varsity Quartet and the Hy- Los, a comedy group of 19 men within the club, will also partici pate in the concert. The program marks the open ing of the annual spring tour for the group, which is directed by Frank Gullo, associate professor of music. The tour will include Williamsport; Elmira, N.Y.; Buf falo, N.Y.; Erie; and Ridgway, where concerts will be sponsored by the Penn State clubs of the areas. Members of the Hy-Los are •Charles Hughes, Norman Mitter ling, James Erb, Fred Geyer, Wil liam Park, Ronald Kinsey, Frank lin Allison, David Young, Glenn Wiggins, Lynn Fowler, Kenneth Reagle, Durrwachter, Charles Fal zone, Richard Spriggs, Peter Far rell, Gordon Seward, Geor g e Jeffries, Robert Enterline, and Klug. Lost-Hour's Sleep; Daylight Saving Starts Tomorrow Penn Staters will be losing an other hour of that precious com modity, sleep, when they set their timepieces ahead at 2 a.m. tomorrow for the annual start of five months , of daylight saving time. Most of the borough councils in Centre County and the College have adopted DST, which will affect 65,000,000 people through out the country. The majority of bus and train lines also use DST, FIVE CENTS