Council Balloting ... VOTING was generally light in the election of representatives to eight college councils yesterday. Alice Krellner and Marilyn Kaplan, standing, cast ballots for Education Student Council members as Harry Shank and Frances Crawford supervise the election. Voting will continue today for representatives "of - all councils except Agriculture. Council Voting Reported Poor Voting on the first day of student council elections was very dis appointing, three elections committee chairmen said yesterday. Approximately 125 students voted for the 57 candidates for Edu cation Student Council seats, Sally Lessig, chairman, said. She said she considers the turn-out for the election very poor. There are 686 students in the College of Edu cation. Of the 853 students eligible to vote in the Business Administra tion Student Council election, 86 voted. David Baker, elections chairman, said more students should vote to support the candi dates and to get better represen tation. Speech Contest Begins Tonight Thirty-nine students will com pete in the eliminations of the John Henry Frizzell Extempore Speaking Contest at 7 tonight in assigned rooms in Sparks Build ing. Contestants will debate on top ics submitted by themselves or ob tained from a list provided by the committee in charge of the contest. Debate squad members may not use debate topics or other forensic contest topics. Contestants will speak on the topics for five min utes and withoUt notes. One from each of the twelve elimination sections will compete in the semi-finals at 7:30 tonight in 316 Sparks. ' First place winner will receive the $5O prize. Second place win ner will be given the $25 Foren sic Council prize: Both winners will receive the John Henry Friz zell award of merit in extempore speaking. Dress Rumor Denied Reports that the Dean of Wom en's office issued a ruling con cerning dress apparel dur i n g Spring Week activities were term ed false yesterday by Pearl 0. Weston, dean of women. Governor to For Confab Governor John S. Fine will arrive by plane at the University to day to address the seventh annual Pennsylvania' Recreation Confer ence at a luncheon meeting at the Nittany Lion Inn. Municipal officials and more than 300 recreation leaders will hear Governor Fine speak on the status of recreation in Pennsylvania. Governor Fine is expected to leave the University shortly after his address. Francis Gordon, room assign ment officer in the department of housing, will, demonstrate how to prepare for a prolonged hike in the wilds from 9 to 11:45 a.m. tomorrow in Hort Woods. Gordon will hold a question and answer period during the demon stration., A canoeist, Gordon has his own guide service in Ontario, Canada. He will draw answers to questions' from his experience as a guide in the Algonquin. Provin cial Park,-200 miles north of Tor onto... A3nong . the topics to be dia- One hundred and ten students voted yesterday in the Liberal Arts Student Council elections. Larry Gedrich, chairman, said he was very disappointed with the lack of interest of LA students. There are 1217 freshmen, sopho mores, and juniors in the college who may vote. In the Chemistry and Physics college, there are 597 students whO may vote in the elections. Of this number, 136 voted. Mineral Industries college, with approximately 320 students eligi ble to vote, had a turnout of 44 students. No estimate of the number of voters,( was available from the Home Economics Council. Wilmot Stamm, chairman of the elections for the Enginering Coun cil said the voting turnout was fair. No estimate was available for the Physical Education and Ath letics Council vote. The elections in this college will be extended until 12 p.m. tomorrow because the ballots were distributed late. By PHYLLIS PROPERT cussed and demonstrated by Gor don are: information on materials to take on a long hike, methods of making oneself comfortable in the woods, selection and use of the axe, methods of packing and car rying on the trail, and what foods to pack for a long trip. A folk dance workshop, under the direction of a graduate of the University, Mrs. Betty Jane Dittmar, 610 W. Nittany avenue, and Tsuneo Y. Tanabe, assistant professor of dairy husbandry, will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the West Dorm lounge. The instruc tion. period is free to the Arrive Today •Elattg VOL. 54. No. 132 STATE COLLEGE. PA., THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 6, 1954 FIVE CENTS Sorority Endorsed By NANCY WARD President Milton S. Eisenhower has endorsed a plan to build sorority houses in quad rangle form at the University as a future housing program. Sororities may be quartered in a row house arrangement of buildings constructed in, a quadrangle and containing a number of sorority units. Under the plan, the University would build, landscape`, and maintain the properties on University ground. Units would then be rented to sororities. President Eisenhower said at a meeting of women's fraternity counselors in March that he, as one individual, is willing to work for a program of sorority house building similar to that at North western University as outlined above. He said buildings might be uni form in size and construction, ex cept for minor architectural de tails for the sake of variety. He said he thought it reasonable that sororities choose their own decora tive schemes and accessories and suggested the houses might be so designed that adjoining living room, dining room and library may be used as one for dancing and other social functions. A chap eron's suite would be included in each house. Grade Plan to Go To Senate Today The proposed grading system, approved Monday by Honor Society Council, will be presented to the University Senate this afternoon. C. 0. Williams, Senate secretary, "said yesterday the plan would be presented, but no action will be taken until the next Senate Town Counc;l Elects Weidner New President Donald Weidner, fourth semes ter agriculture education major, was elected president of Town Council last nigh t, defeating George Makar, fourth semester education major, 9-3. Other newly-elected officers are Thomas Smeal, fourth semester wood utilization major, vice pres ident; Makar. secretary; and Don ald Neifert, - sixth semester labor management major, treasurer. Council unanimously approved two proposals made by Robert Schoner, retiring treasurer, one that nomination of ward repre sentatives be made at a meeting to be held not later than three weeks after the beginning of the fall semester and the other that a: two-thirds vote of quorum be required for amendments. Nominations of ward repre sentatives' are now made through petition. Amendments now re quire a two-thirds vo t e of all members of council. Both proposals will go into ef fect next semester. Final plans for the council pic nic to be held Saturday at Green wood-Furnace were discussed. Retiring officers of council are Chester Cherwinski, president; Francis Mears, vice president; Schoner, treasurer; and J ain e s McDowell, secretary. Tractor Driving Takes on Speed The student branch of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers is sponsoring a tractor driving contest Saturday in the parking lot between the Forestry Building and the Plant Industries Building. There will be separate compe tition for men and women. The men's division will start at 1 p.m. and the women's at 3 p.m. Prizes will be awarded to the winner of each division. Entry blanks are available at the Student Union desk in Old Main and on the first floor of Ag riculture Building. The entry deadline is 5 p.m. today. Ellis in 'Good' Condition Patricia Ellis, Women's Student Government Association pre s i dent, was reported in "good" con dition yesterday. However, her X-ray report - has not been received by the Uni versity Hospital. Miss Ellis was slightly injured Tuesday night when she stepped off the curb of Pollock road be tween Osmond and Walker lab oratories into the path of an auto mobile. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE meeting, June 3. The new system would establish grades ranging from 4 to 0 and replace the/ present system of grades ranging from 3 to -2. The plan also recommends that the minimum graduation requirement be raised to a 2.0 All-University average. Under the proposed system, the -2 would be eliminated and a cumulative honor point system for determining All-University standing would be used. In the new system 4 would be an "A" and 0 a failure. This sys tem is now employed by most other colleges. i The. Senate will also hear. a re port from the committee on ad missions, recommendirig that three units of English be required for admission to the freshman class. At the present time, there is no formal statement of English requirements listed in the Uni versity catalogue. In its report the committee will recommend that since most Penn sylvania high schools req u i r e three units of English for gradu ation, the requirement should be formally stated in the catalogue. The committee on rules will also present a report to Senate recommending that the Senate Regulations. for Undergraduate Students be adapted to fit the needs of students at centers. The committee's recommendations will propose that a separate handbook be published for the students at the centers, and that the director of general extension be appointed to the committee on rules in an ex-officio capacity, because of the frequency of extension problems in rules considerations. Tal s Begin Friday sn indoc ina Peace GENEVA, May 5 (AP)—France and the Soviet Union agreed today to start peace talks on Indochina Friday, if possible, and certainly by Saturday. Agreement was reached as French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault decided to ride out his country's Cabinet crisis in Geneva. Bidault's decision against being present for the vote of confidence tomorrow in Parliament wa s taken as a sign of confidence-the Cabinet would survive. Jean Chauvel, French ambassa dor in Switzerland, spent an hour with Deputy Soviet Foreign Min ister Andrei Gromyko discussing the impending peace parley. Both agreed it should start as soon as feasible, Later Chauvel reported the re sults of his conversations to Brit ish and U.S. delegations. It ap peared that only the belated arrival of delegates from the As sociated States of Indochina was holding up the peace meeting. A Vietnamese delegation of three, including Deputy Premier Tottrgiatt Housing by Prexy President Eisenhower said all rooms would have to be filled as in any dormitory. If a sorority were unable to fill all of its rooms, he said, the University would re serve the right to move in other women to obtain maximum rental at all times. President Eisenhower said noth ing will be done about the plan until the current studies designed to estimate the size of the campus population by 1970 are completed. He said it is expected the studies will 'predict a large increase in enrollment, especially of women students. In that event, he said, new women's dormitories will have to be built. 600 Woman Dorm President Eisenhower said ten tative thinking is that the next dormitory should house 600 wo men in units of 125 women each and fanning out from a central kitchen. Each 125-woman unit would be fed in its own dining room, he said. Future dormitories will prob ably be built at a lower cost than were McElwain and Simmons Halls, President Eisenhower said. The two dormitories on Short lidge road represented a cost of $6OOO per woman, he said, and it is expected future construction will be held at $4500 per woman. President Eisenhower said he is agreeable to building future dormitories in the form of sorority houses. However, he said, he had been told women at the Univer (Continued on page eight) Nguyen Trung Vinh, Foreign Minister Nguyen Quoc Dinh and Minister for Democratization Continued on page eight) TODAY'S WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY SHOWERS Room Occupancy f -4 WITH