(page two Chest to Initiqte IBM Tabulators International business machine cards will be used to record cash (pledges for the Campus Chest when solicitations start Tuesday, •according to Joseph Haines, solicitations committee chairman. The 250 solicitors will leave the IBM cards with students and (Will collect the cards at a later date. Students may state their con- Tribunal Places Two Students On Probation Two students were placed on probation last night by Tribunal for recurrent violations of cam- Jpus parking violations. 1 _ One violator was charged with [five offenses in his first appear ance before the judiciary com- Imittee. He was charged with driv ing on campus without a permit and illegal parking during class hours. He said he applied for a permit and was eligible for one, but lacked a permanent address and could not receive it. Tribunal suspended his driving privileges for two weeks and ordered him to report at the next two meetings. 'At the end of the two week pro bation, a permit will be issued. Another student was charged (with two violations on his first (offense before Tribunal. A $1 fine iwas levied and the student was (put on probation for two weeks. The student lacked a driving per mit, but no longer has a car on '.campus. | James Schulte, Tribunal chair man, warned habitual offenders (that strict measures will be taken ion a second offense. A maximum [fine of $3 will be meted out for a second offense. Further violations [will lead to disciplinary action by ithe Dean of Men’s office. j Schulte announced that viola tors who ignore notices to appear before Tribunal will be charged .with a first offense. Failure to ap pear a second time will result in a second offense before a case is heard. ■ In other action taken by Tri bunal 16 $1 fines were levied. A total of $ll was collected. Four $1 suspended fines were issued and five cases were dismissed with a warning. Students complained that park ling areas on Ag Hill are seldom Jfilled during the day. They pro tested that they were denied park ing privileges in lots that are al lways vacant. Schulte explained that the Campus Patrol is conducting traf fic surveys to consider the advis ibility of opening certain lots to general parking during afternoon ihours. Riders Will Petition College for Horses The Penn State Riding Club today will inaugurate a two-week campaign for more horses to be bought by the College and made available to any student who wishes recreational riding. i The club will circulate petiti officials. Persons interested in i ■asked to sign the petitions, accord ing to Edna Grabiak, Riding Club president. “If enough students show in terest in these petitions, the Col lege will purchase more horses and eventually will provide an indoor riding ring,” she said. There is no place near State College at which horses can be rented. The College now has 13 horses Which serve approximately 100 students enrolled in the riding course. In addition, students may ride College-owned horses on or ganized trail rides. A donation of $1 an hour is accepted. “The demand for horses on the 'trail rides has shown that 13 horses simply are not enough for a school of 10,000 students,” Miss Grabiak said. ■ “We have to turn away people from the trail rides each week because we don’t have enough horses.” ! At present there is no indoor ( riding ring at the College. The students use the stock pavilion jfor winter riding classes. Only Ifive horses can be used there at tribution on the cards. Contribu tions will be added to next se mester’s fees, Haines said. The IBM machines cannot reg ister an amoynt less than $l. Contributions less than $1 will be collected by the solicitor. Chairman Listed There will be six collection areas: dormitory men, town men, fraternities, town women, dormi tory women, and faculty. Chairmen in charge of solici tations in these areas are Thomas Dennis, dormitory men; Richard Schuler, town men; Irvin White, fraternities; Patricia Jones, town women; Virginia Opoczenski and Elsa Pasline, dormitory women; and Prof. A. H. Imhoff, faculty. Goal is $12,000 Solicitations for faculty contri butions will be conducted Nov. 11 to 25. Goal of the drive is $12,000, which will be divided among nine groups and operating expenses. The nine groups and percentages are Penn State Christian Associ ation, 46 per cent; World Student Service Fund, 13 per cent; Wom en’s Student Government Associ ation Christmas Fund, six per cent; State College Welfare Fund, one per cent; Salvation Army, six per cent; Heart Fund, six per cent; American Cancer Society, six per cent; Penn State Scholar ship Fund, seven per cent; and National Student Service Fund for Negro Students, five per cent. Operating expenses will take four per cent. Queen Photo Size Suggested Photographs 5 by 7 or 8 by 10 inches are preferred for the Miss Junior Class contest, Irvin White, selections committee chairman, said yesterday. It is not essen tial that submitted photographs be this size, however. The deadline for submitting entries has been extended to noon Nov. 5. Any regularly matricu lated junior may be sponsored by groups or individuals. Photo graphs should be turned in at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Personal interviews with the entrants will be held by the se lections committee No.v. 5 and 6. The bat is the only mammal that can fly. ions to be turned over to College recreational horseback riding are one time, and as a result stu dents get only about one-half hour of riding a week during the win ter, according to Miss Grabiak. “Without an indoor ring there are always some horses just standing around doing nothing all winter. If we had' the ring we could utilize all the horses, and students could get the full amount of riding for which they are pay ing,” G. A. Gagarin, assistant professor of physical education, said. 3 for the price of 2 DRY CLEANING SPECIAL Bring your clothes down today • FROMM'S THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Ag Council Discusses Party Plans Final plans for the Ag Hill Par ty to be held in Recreation. Hall Nov. 8 were discussed at the Ag riculture Student Council meeting last night- William Waters, chairman of the party, reported on the work of the various committees for the six hour program. He stated that numerous scholarships will be awarded at the party and that over 300 prizes will be given through different kinds of enter tainment. Square dancing will be included in the program. Master of ceremonies for the Ag Hill Party will be Edgar Feh nel, who was chosen in a competi tive tryout last week, Waters an nounced. Arrangements are also being made to serve food to 1600 persons. It was announced that ticket sales for the party began Tues day among the various depart ments in the' School of Agricul ture. Tables will be set up in the Agriculture and Dairy Buildings next week from which agriculture students may obtain tickets. The remaining tickets will go on sale at Old Main. Lion Loses Stripes As Painters Scour The Niliany Lion has his proper color back today. Painters from the physical plant got to work on him last night with paint solvents and wire, brushes and scoured off his orange and black stripes. The mascot looks only a little worse from the wear and tear, according to Charles A. Lamm, supervisor of maintenance and operation. Seat Plan Approved With Limits The plan to allocate 300 seats for alumni, faculty, and towns people, proposed by Ernest B. Mc- Coy, dean of. the School of Physi cal Education and Athletics, was approved by the Home Econom ics Student Council with certain limitations. There was no definite proposal by the council, but it was felt that those who would receive the tickets should have the same seat ing advantages of the students. Another plan by McCoy, that of dividing holders of AA books into two groups allowing each group to attend half of the athletic events in Recreation Hall was unanimously turned down by the council. Elections will be conducted for freshman student council repre sentatives tomorrow and Friday. Four, representatives will be chos en from the 17 students submit ting nomination applications. The polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. both tomorrow and Friday. Dr. Russell B. Dickerson, vice dean of the School of Agriculture, spoke to the council members on parliamentary procedure. Snow Flurries Fall; More Expected Today Snow flurries fell on State Col lege and vicinity yesterday, ac cording to Charles L. Hosier, in structor of meteorology. Falling around noon, and again at night the snow melted as it touched the ground. Hosier said snow also could be expected to day. Orange Crate Kindergarten DONNA BANE. Mrs. Nora Graffius, assistant professor of educa tion. and Melinda Thomas apply ivory paint to a bookcase made from orange crates, while students in the background add finish ing touches to a work table. The bookcase is one of the many makeshift pieces of orange crate furniture made by 36 elementary education' majors to furnish k’ndergarten for 30 children unable to enroll in the crowded State College school building. Education Majors Build Kindergarten How would you like to sit at a glamorous orange-crate table for a desk, on a padded nail keg stool, to study your calculus qr ancient European history? Although 30 children, age 5, aren’t attempting to study the finer points of calculus in this orange-crate State College kindergarten, they’re doing a lot of crayon col More surprising than the fact with this makeshift equipment is that 36 Penn State coeds, playing carpenter, made~the orange-crate furniture. The women are elementary ed ucation majors in Mrs. Nora Graf fius’ Education 33E class. They had three weeks to hammer and nail ,the furnishings for an “ex tra kindergarten” created to take care of 30 children who couldn’t enroll in the regular, and crowd ed, State College school building. Store, Kitchen, Too With gallons of ivory paint, sand paper, hammers, and nails, the women went to work. One of them, Jan Gladfelter, reported no serious mishaps during this carpentry experiment just the usual black thumbnails where a hammer missed its target, and perhaps a bit of gray hair (the result of getting too close to a still-wet orange crate.) “I even learned to countersink a nail,” she said. The school is complete with record cases, shelves, lockers, has socks, a toy store, science table, and miniature kitchen with iron ing board, refrigerator, and stove —all fashioned ' out of packing boxes, orange and apple crates, and scraps of board. Standard Height Used Jan described the stove and re frigerator they made in great detail. “The stove has a door with a spring closing that opens down wards just like a real one, with round burners on top and knobs that turn.” The refrigerator, she said, sits on small block legs, has a door, handle, and extra shelves. Every thing from the counter in the toy store (over which dolls, doll clothes, balls, and games are sold by a five-year-old storekeeper for (Continued on page eight) Good Food ai Popular Prices DUTCH PANTRY Our Own Baked Goods Fresh Daily OPEN Every Day 7 a.m. 'til Midnight 230 E. College Ave. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER p, lSp By HELEN LUYBEN loring. that the kindergarten is furnished Adding Machine Course Offered A course to acquaint economics and commerce students with mechanical accounting systems will be conducted by the Bur roughs Adding Machine Co. to day through Nov. 7. The company will install 26 business machines on the ground floor of Willard Hall for the course, which consists of lectures and machine demonstrations. Students will be divided into groups and • assigned a one-hour class today, tomorrow, and Mon day through Friday of next week. Student Disciplined A third semester engineering student has been suspended from the College for dishonesty on an examination by the College dis ciplinary committee. Because of College policy, the student’s name was withheld. BE SURE TO VOTE JOAN CRAWFORD IN JOHN PAYNE ARLENE DAHL TONITE - OPEN 6:00 ALEC GUINNESS "KIND HEARTS and mmm" "SUDDEN FEAR"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers