PAGE TWO Windcrest to Be Group to Revise The Spring Week committee Thursday night selected the Spring Carnival site and be gan a revision of the Spring Week point system, George Richards, chairman, announced yes terday. The point system is beii winning the Spring Week troj 1400 to Attend Ag Hill Party En Rec Hall More than 1400 students and faculty members are expected to attend the annual Ag Hill Party tonight in Recreation Hall. Tick ets will be on sale at the door. The party will begin at 5:15 p.m. with a cafeteria style din ner. At 7 p.m., Richard Ahern, seventh semester agronomy ma jor ,will lead group singing. Agri culture products will serve as prizes for the free bingo games from 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. The Varsi ty Quartet will present a special musical program after the bingo games. Winners of the School of Agriculture scholarships will re ceive awards at 8:30 p.m. Follow ing the presentation of awards Ross Lytle and his orchestra will play for round and square danc ing until midnight. . Clubs appointed to committees are: tickets, Grange and 4-H; dec orations, Hort Club; food, Future Farmers of America, Zoology, Bot any and Rod and Croccus Clubs; entertainment, Agriculture Eco nomics Club; reception, Coaly So ciety; check room, Forestry So ciety; dining room, Clover and Poultry Clubs and the Liebig Chemical Society; trucking, Block and Bridle Club; clean-up, Agriculture Engineering and Pre- Vet Clubs; name cards, General Agriculture Club and bingo, Dairy Science Club. Glenn Wiggins, ninth semester forestry major, will be master of ceremonies. Faculty committee in charge of the party include Glenn R. Kean, assistant professor of an imal husbandry, chairman; Roy C. Buck, assistant professor of rural sociology, and William R. Davey, instructor of dairy hus bandry. 'Worth' to Of Chapel Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld, national director of the B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundations, will speak at Chapel services on “How Shall We Measure Worth?” at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. A native of New York, Rabbi Board of Trustees of World Unive: formerly the World Student Serv ice Fund. The international organ ization is supported on campus by Campus Chest contributions. He served as Rabbi of Temple Israel' in Omaha, Neb. after re ceiving his B.A. degree from Columbia University and an M.H.L. degree from Hebrew Un ion College in Cincinnati. Rabbi Lelyveld is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Frequent Visitor A frequent visitor at the Uni versity, Rabbi Lelyveld spoke at Chapel and participated in Re ligion-In-Life Week last year. During the War he served as executive director of the Com mittee on Unity for Palestine of the Zionist Organization. He trav eled extensively through the na tion supporting the idea of a Jewish state. In 1951 Rabbi Lely veld visited Israel and initiated THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA ig re-evaluated, Richards said, ihy merely by acquiring the ] The Windcrest area near Col lege avenue, where trailers have beeii removed, was selected for the carnival site, Richards said. The carnival •will be held Wed nesday and Thursday nights of Spring Week, May 10-13. Only Feasible Location He said this was the only , feas ible location since the Department of Physical Plant has prohibited the use of the parking lot behind Sigma Nu and Sigma Chi where last year’s carnival was held. The physical plant refused the use of the area because of dam age done last year to the shrub bery near the parking lot. In re-evaluating Spring Week points, Richards said an attempt is being made to establish a more equal ratio between the point value of the carnival and other Spring Week events. Carnival Points Decreased As a result, the point value of carnival tickets will be decreased and the points awarded for other events increased, he said. Carnival tickets will be valued at one-half a point instead of one point as in the past, Richards said. Parade points will be increased from 50 to 100 points for each entry. Four hundred points will be awarded to parade winners in stead of the 100 points given last year, Richards said. Re-evaluation Incomplete The number of points to be awarded for the He-Man contest, the Miss Penn State contest, the Mad-Hatters parade, and the Ug ly Man contest have not yet been determined. The re-evaluation will be completed in about two weeks, Richards said. The points for the He-Man and Miss Penn State contests will probably be increased, Richards said, but Mad Hatters parade points may be decreased. If Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, wished to again sponsor the Ugly Man con test as part of Spring Week, the points awarded in the contest will also be increased, Richards said. Be Topic Speaker i Lelyveld is also chairman of the irsity Service in the United States, proceedings for the purchase of the Hillel House at the Hebrew University. He is a member of the adminis trative committee of the Commis sion on Justice and Peace of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the executive committee of the Jewish Book Council, the American Jewish Society for Service and of the publications committee of the Jewish Publi cations Society of America. Choir Program Set Chapel Choir, under the direc tion of Mrs. Willa C. Taylor, will sing as introit “Psalm 97” (Schutz) and as anthem “I Have Longed for Thy Saving Health” (Byrd). George E. Ceiga, Chapel organ ist, will play as prelude “Abide With Us” as offertory “Hear O Israel” (Old Hebrew Choral) and as postlude “Hosanna,” all from “Bible Poems” by Weinberger. Carnival Site; Point System ;o prevent student groups from lost carnival points. Laughton Show Ticket Sales Begin Thursday Tickets for “An Evening with Charles Laughton,” next Com munity Forum program, will go on sale for $2 Thursday at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Season tickets for, the remain ing three programs will be on sale Monday to Wednesday for $3.75 at the desk. Laughton’s reading tours, ac cording to Life magazine, have brought about “a new trend in public entertainment.” Crossing the statge with an armload of books, Laughton choose to read what he himself likes. These include Thomas Wolfe’s “Of Time and the River,” some Shakespeare, James Thur ber’s works, Dieken’s “Pickwick Papers,” Mark Twain’s “Life on the Mississippi,” some poetry, some essays, and the Bible. Interspersing his reading with sharply discerning comments, Laughton only appears to be read ing. Actually he knows the text of all that he reads by memory. He visits an average of 50 cities a year putting on the program. Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, and Chester Bowles, former ambassa dor to India, will also speak this year on the Forum program. Below Grades Due Mid-semester below grades are due in the offices of the deans not later than Tuesday. WSGA Sponsors Sing Tomorrow The All-College Sing, spon sored by ihe Women's Student Government Association, will begin at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. Doors will open for ihe sec ond annual sing at 2:30 p.m. Among ihe participating groups will be the 70-v oi c e Penn State Women's Chorus, directed by Raymond H. Brown, assistant professor of music. Frank Gullo, associate pro fessor of music, will direct the 58-voice Penn State Glee Club. Gullo and Hummel Fishburn, musical team, will also lead group singing. A quartet composed of John Jenkins and James Shaw, for mer "Me 11 o w-Aires," and Charles Springman and John Cox will also perform. A Gay Nineties theme will be featured. Anna Webb is charman of the event. BILLS 238 WEST COLLEGE AVE. Lobster Tail Chicken in the Basket Dinners served 5:00 to 8:00 Open 12:00 to 12:00 Steaks Sea Food Phone 3449 Workshop Speaker lerniiy Conference, who outlined steps to opportunity at the fourth annual IFC Workshop banquet held last night at the Nittany Lion Inn. Cochran Steps to Lloyd S. Cochran, vice chairman of the National Interfraternity Conference, last night outlined the steps whereby modern society may prepare fpr opportunity when it comes. Cochran, speaking at the fourth annual IFC Workshop Banquet at the Nittany Lion Inn, told his audience the old axiom, “Oppor tunity only knocks once,” no long er applies. “We are living today under a different set of circumstances and impelling motives then we did years ago,” Cochran stated. Certain Tenets Needed There are certain things which every fraternity man must live by before the opportunity which fraternities offer can be fully realized, he said. These included the basic tenets which guided our forefathers Cochran especially emphasized thriftiness. “Many of the things we enjoy are -due to our fore fathers thriftiness,” Cochran said. “Individuals as well as organiza tions must learn the vital impor tance of this old-fashioned but vital tenet,” he said. Applying the idea of thriftiness to today’s fraternities, Cochran pointed out that fraternities must he based on sound business prac tices and intelligent control of house finances if they are to be successful. Public Relations Important Cochran also listed public re lations as a matter of vital im portance for the maintenance of fraternities in today’s society. Stating that every fraternity man and every fraternity has an obli gation in the matter of public qJ* f..-. * Ask any Penn State coed 1 To name her favorite dealer “For school supplies/’ she’ll no doubt say “I always shop, at Keeler’s” KEELER'S CATHAUM THEATRE BLDG. - W. COLLEGE AVE. SfctttkdA'Y, NOVEMBER 14, 1953 Outlines Opportunity relations, ‘ Cochran pointed out that it is first necessary to do something which is worthy of being told. In closing, Cochran stressed the importance of living by our fore fathers spiritual values, the ideals exemplified in the lives of our country’s founders and the ideals expressed at fraternity initiations. It is necessary for fraternities to have a solid foundation of spirit ualism if they are to take their rightful place in the college com munity, he stated. If we can put. into our chapters . and national organizations those things which have made our country great, we will be ready for opportunity when it comes, he said. Customs Board to Start Program Change Today Freshman Joint Customs Board will begin revisions of freshman customs at 10 a.m. today in 204 Old Main. Individual students,, dormitory counselors, and campus organiza tions wishing to submit recom mendations to the board may do so at the Student Union desk in Old Main, Thomas Farrell and Joyce Shusman, co-c hairmen, have announced.