The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 15, 1953, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Tribunal Pr o pos e s Probation,
Move for Frosh Rioter.
Tribunal recommended to the Dean of Men Tuesday night that a first semester journ
alism major be placed on Tribunal probation and that he be moved frOm the West Dormi
tory area to the Nittany-Pollock area.
Tribunes! probation means that the stu dent must report to the Tribunal . the first
meeting of every month, and, at his last tneeting•of the semester, the. entire case will be re-
v tew ea
Promotion
To Begin
For Concerts
A kick-off meeting for the
Community Concert Association
membership drive will be held
for Members of • the campaign
committee at '7 p.m. Monday in
Simmons Hall lounge.
Harold Welch, assistant eastern
manager for Community Con,
certs, Inc., New York, will ex
plain the association's policies.
Membership forms will be distri
buted to campaign workers,
The campaigning will begin
Monday night following the meet
ing and continue until Oct. 24,
unless all memberships are sold
before that day.
St. Paul's Cathedral Choir 'of
London will open the concert
series Oct. 26 in Schwab Audi
torium. The remainder of the pro
gram will not be scheduled until
the membership drive is com
pleted.
William Greenham is chairman
of the student membership cam
paign. Other members of the stu
dent committee are Robert Jones,
West Dorms; Kenneth Lawley and
John Jenkins, fraternities; Fred
Orkiscski and Joan McKinley,
town; Elizabeth Stuter, women's
dormitories, and Greenham, Nit
tany-Pollock dormitories.
Students not reached by cam
paign workers may purchase tick
ets, starting Tuesday, in 204 Old
Main or from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday
and Thursday in Carnegie Hall.
Previous members of . the as
sociation have been contacted this
week so they may renew their
memberships before the drive for
new members opens.
Chem-Phys Photos
Chemistry and Physics seniors
may have pictures taken for La-
Vie today through Monday at the
Penn State Photo Shop.
Campus Chest Plans
Three Day Drives
The student solicitation campaign :for the 1953-54 Campus Chest
drive will be held Oct. 26-28, Richard Gibbs, chairman, has an
nounced.
The faculty solicitation drive will be conducted. Nov. 3-5, he
said.
The purpose of Campus Chest
is to combine all charity drives
into one campaign. Organizations
not included in the campaign may
not solicit independently on cam
pus.
A total of $935 was collected in
the annual Kick-Off dance Sept.
25, the first event sponsored for
the benefit of the drive.
Student contributors to this
year's drive may designate • the
charities included in the campaign
to which they wish to aive their
money.
Previously, the amount given
each charity was determined on
a percentage basis. Contributors
could not designate their money
to specific groups.
Gibbs said this year's program
is an experiment to determine
which charities students desire to
support.
Contributors who do not wish
to designate their money may in
dicate this on the International
Business Machine cards which
will be used in the drive.
GIFTS Players'
NITTANY CARD & GIFT SHOP the moon is blue
East College Ave. Now Playing at
Opp. Atherton Dorm Center Stage
The student aJeatird guilty to
a charge of contributing to the
general disturbance during West
Dorm riot Sept. 23, but pleaded
not (Fully to three other charges.
These vet..e:
1. Conduct detrimental to the
College..
2. Damaging College property,
in the form of tossing and kick
ing, a Waste basket around the
courtyard.
S. Refusal to cooperate with
student leaders who were trying
to quell the disturbance.
Insufficient Evidence
The student, testifying he had
not been out in the courtyard dur
ing the riot, denied these charges,
but admitted shouting from a
window.
- _
Tribunal decided, by a 3-2 de
cision with 'one abstention', there
was not sufficient evidence to
prove he had been the person in
the courtyard.
If the dean of men accepts Tri
bunals recommendation, he will
be setting a precedent.
Student 'Thrown Out'
During the four and a half hour
meeting, 12 traffic cases were
heard. Of these. 11 were fined
and one was given a suspended
fine. There were nine $1 fines,
one $5 fine for a first and second
offense. and another first offense
fine, with the second offense fine
being suspended.
An unusual • circumstance oc
curred at the meeting. A student
was "thrown' out of court" be
cause he had no case.
-
He appeared before Tribunal
to prove that All-College Cabi
net's dormitory dress rule was un
constitutional, and that such a
regulation would come under the
Association of Independent Men.
Since he had no test case, Tri
bunal ruled they had no poweri l
to hear his complaint. They em
phasized the fact that a case is
needed before they can rule on
its constitutionality.
Dairy Science Meeting
A movie on the bulk handling
of milk will be shown to the Penn
State Dairy Science Club at 7
tonight in 117 Dairy.
Profits from special events
sponsored by Campus Chest and
any undesignated donations will
be distributed to the charities in
cluded in the drive on the basis
of a percentage system.
Percentages established • . are
Penn State Christian Association,
35; World University Service, 20;
Penn State Student Scholarship
Fund, 10; Women's Student Gov
ernment Association Christmas
Fund, 4; the State College Wel
fare Fund, 1; American Heart As
sociation, Celebral Palsy of Penn
sylvania, American Red Cross and
the Salvation Army, 5; and the
Damon Runyon Cancer Fund and
the American Cancer Society, 2.5.
Five per cent will be allocated
for operational expenses.
Contributions may be made in
cash only. Previously students
could make cash donations or
pledge donations. Pledges could
be paid with spring semester
fees. Because fees are now col
lected before registration, stu
dents may not make pledges.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
WD Council
Approves
Coed Dining
The West Dorm Council passed
resolutions Monday night approv
ing coeducational dining in the
West Dorm area and favoring the
half-holiday for one of the com
ing football weekends.
The recommendation favoring
the half-holiday was given to Joe
Somers, president of the Associ
ation of Independent Men. The
half-holiday proposal, tabled by
All-College Cabinet last week,
will be brought before cabinet to
night.
Election of Council vice pres
ident, secretary and treasurer will
be held next Thursday, Ross
Clark, president, announced.
The council appointed Steven.
Jordon chairman of the election
committee. He will be assisted
by Stanley Jur as and Thomas
Larsen. Robert Gellman was ap
pointed acting secretary until
elections are held.
Coinmittee chairmen will be
appointed by Clark this week for
menu-food, publicity, Spring
Week, housing, intramural sports,
dating code, radio and' television,
keys and awards and banquets.
Committee heads must be mem
bers of the council, Clark said.
However, men selected by the
chairmen to work on the com
mittees may be residents of any
West Dorm living unit.
Weekly council meetings, for
merly scheduled for 7 p.m. Mon
day, we r e changed to 7 p.m.
Thursday in 107 Willard. u
The television set, which has
been in the main West Dorm
lounge, will be moved to McKee
lounge. Reception tests held in
Hamilton lounge and the Hamil
ton recreation room proved these
rooms to be unsatisfactory loca
tions for the set, Clark said.
H Ec Council
Plans Elections
Plans for election of freshman
representatives to the Home Ec
onomics Student Council and an
informal "tea have been made by
the council. -
Council nominations will be
held Nov. 21 to 23 and election
Nov. 26 and 27. Freshmen can
,nominate - themselves by turning
in their names and pictures to
the main lobby of Home Econoth
ics building. The elections com
mittee is., composed of Margaret
Faris, Sarah McKnight and Au
drey Nash.
A tea for freshmen and faculty
in the school will be held Nov. 1.
Mary Buchanan will ser v e as
chairman for the tea, assisted by
Marilyn Fisher, Elizabeth Byrem
and Andrew Stavres.
Marketing Club Tour
A field trip to an Altoona de
partment store will be sponsored
.euesday by the Marketing Club.
A bus will leave at 11:15 p.m.
from in front of the Mineral In
dustries building. Students may
sign up and pay the $1 fare to
marketing instructors.
Shall We Dance? SAM'S ' 129 S. Allen St.
at the '
AUTUMN
,
•
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ••
-
BALL , CEREAL, TOAST, COFFEE .25 *-
JUICE, CEREAL, COFFEE .30
OCT. 24 REC HALL
Tickets $2.50
2 EGGS, any style, TOAST, COFFEE .40, . ' -
.
..
Refreshments with HAM, BACON or SAUSAGE ... .65 .. ,
Info;mal ,
Served
.7-10 a.m.
Rec ....Hatt -to: :%;F"..eati.fre
Hotel 'Theme at Bali
Recreation Hall will be transformed into 4- hotel ballroom at
9 p.m. Saturday at the ninth annual Belle Hop Ball sponsored by
the Penn State Hotel Greeters Aspociation
Five Greek columns will-provil
the ceiling will be covered with
miles of blue and white crepe
paper streamers will complete the
decorations. \
The punch table will be at the
north end of Rec Hall in front of
a blue velvet drape. The table
will be covered with light blue
netting and illuminated by blue
spotlights. Punch bowls at either
end of the table will be sur
rounded by fall flowers and
greens.
Five fruit juices will be corn
binecl into the 'fruit punch, and
, Thomas Bchott, president of
Interfraternity Council, yester
day announced the Belle Hop
Ball weekend will not be a big
weekend. Freshman girls may
take one o'clocks for the dance.
fresh fruit, molded in large ice
cubes, will be floating in, each
punch bowl.
Tr ay s of hors d'oeuvres will
also be served. These will include
checkerboard " and ribbon sand
wiches, ham-filled cream puffs,
stuffed celery and cheese puffs.
The refreshments will be served
at intermission by Hotel Admin
istration students, following the
coronation of Mr. Penn State by
Mrs. Milton S. Eisenhower.
Twenty-two men have been en
tered in the Mr. Penn State con
test. Five finalists will be an
nounced tomorrow. The final win
ner will be chosen at the dance
by audience applause.
Tickets priced at $2.40 per cou
ple will go on sale today in front
of the Corner Room. They are
also available at the Hotel Ad
ministration office, Home Econ
omics, the Student Union desk in
Old Main and the West Dorm
lounge and from members of the
Greeters Club.
Society to Hold
Lunar Viewing
Alpha Nu, astronomy honorary
society; will sponsor observations
on the moon from 7 to 9 p.m. to
morrow and Sunday at the
lege Observatories, weather per
mitting.
The moon's relatively short
distance of 239,000 miles from the
earth makes an interesting study
of the lunar craters, Dr. Carl A.
Bauer, assistant professor of phy
sics, said. .
The theory that the moon's
craters were formed by ,the im
pact of meteorites has the most
favor among scientists, Dr. Bauer
added.
The honorary has also •an-.
nounced that it will hold a
smoker for the regular members
and candidates for the group at
8 p.m. next Tuesday.
APhiQ to Organize
New Pledge Class
Alpha Phi Omega, national
service fraternity, will form a
pledge class at 8:15 p.m. Monday
in 12 Sparks. The class will be
made up of those who attended
the last meeting of the fraternity
and other interested persons.
Projects for this semester in
clude registration of the alumni
during Homecoming in the West
Dorms,- serving at a cider party
for alumni at Recreation Hall Sat
urday night and solicitations of
Campus Chest funds from inde
pendent town students.
An act forbidding slavery in the
British empire waspassed in 1808.
THURSDAY, (-I . ‘c:Tpß 15, 1953
By ANN LEH
the center for the theine, while
blue, star-studded canopy. Four
Faculty Club .
Will Sporisor
Panel Program
A panel discussion on - "Some
Activities to Advance. Inter
national Understanding on the
Penn State Campus" will be held
at noon Monday at the Faculty
Luncheon Club in the Hotel State
College.
Members of the panel will be
Dr. David W. Russell, professor
of education, moderator; Dr.. El
ton Atwater, associate professor
of political science; Rebecca Doer
ner, secretary of veterans and
foreign students; Dr. Hazel M.
Hatcher, professor of home eco
nomics education and home com
munity relationships; Fred K.
Hoehler, assistant professor of
political science in extension; and
James F. Keim, associate professor
of agriculture extension.
Elections Near
For MI School
Mineral Industries Student
Council elections to replace a
former senior, junior, and a soph
omore will be held from 9:00 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m. Oct. 26 and 27 in
the MI Building.
Nomination blanks will be
posted on the main MI bulletin
boards from 9:00 a.m: Monday un
til 12:00 noon Friday. The MI
students nominated must have a
1.0 All-College average and be in
a regular semester.
Election of two freshmen will
take place on Oct. 24 at 8:00 a.m.
in the MI Lecture class.
The upperciass elections will
replace Richard Lemyre, ' senior;
William Warner, junior; Ronald
Wertman. sophomore.
The MI Council constitution
was amended to say, "Unexcused
absence from three meetings per
year . . . is cause for removal from
the council." Formerly, "Absence
from three consecutive meetings"
was cause for removal.
BILL'S
238 WEST COLLEGE AVE.
Sea Food
Lobster Tail
Chicken
in the Baske'
Dinners served
5:00 to 8:00
Phone 3449
Open 12:00 to 12:00
Steaks