Weather— Cloudy and Cooler VOL: 55. No. 15 Dress Rules In Dorms To Be Enforced Sunday The ruling of the Dean of Men’s office governing men’s dress of coats ties for Sunday dinner and co-educational dining will be strictly enforced starting' Sunday, according to James W. Dean, assistant to-the dean of. men in charge of independent affairs. The ruling, which was approved and passed by All-University Cabinet last year, , is designed, to improve , the appearance and so ciability of the West Dormitory and " Nittany-Pollock area. Floor counselors will enforce the dress rule.' Town Council Elects Men From 7 Wards Seven representatives and four alternates were elected to Town Council last night. Lone nominees from Ward two, 10, and 15- w ere automatically elected- by their own votfi while contests were staged in the voting for representatives from Wards /one, four, 14, and 17. Ray Rubner, fifth semester agricultural educa tion major, was the only nomi nee from Ward' two and was au tomatically elected as were Wil liam Hodgson, third semester mechanical engineering major, and Joseph Very, fifth sernester agriculture education major, from Wards 10 and 15 respectively. McGrath Elected Daniel McGrath, fifth semester metallurgy major, was elected representative of Ward 1 with Ed win Dull, fifth- semester animal husbandry major, receiving the alternate post. Norman Weingar ten, seventh semester geophysics and geochemistry major, was elected from Ward" four. Marvin Bollman, fifth semester- education major,,is the' alternate. Representative of Ward 14 is Robert Studevant, fifth semester agriculture education major, and alternate, Fred Hancher; fifth se mester electrical engineering ma jor. Joseph Janus, third semester forestry major, was the choice from Ward 17 with John'Eastman, third semester/ chemistry major, as alternate. AIM Representatives The first new. business for the newly-elected council was to elect six members as representatives to the Association of Independent- Men’s Board of Governors. Those elected were-Sturdevant, Rubner, Dull, Hancher, Janus, and Boll man. Hodgson and McGrath are alternatives'. Both elects were conducted ,by David Scott, a mem ber of AlM’s Board of Governors elections committee. IFC Requires All Peddlers To Register Interfraternity Council passed peddlers for large firms to regis ter with John Carpenter, IFC president, and State College pol ice before entering fraternity houses. • ‘, Carpenter urged fraternities not to admit peddlers or salesmen to their houses unless they have cards giving them permission by IFC to sell. He also stated that the permission cards would cost peddlers $lO. - Carpenter also urged that frat ernity officers return' the IFC Workshop questionnaires as soon as possible. They should -be re turned to the corresponding IFC officer, he said. The council also voted to hold meetings at 7 p.m. Mondays from now on instead of Wednesdays. It was announced at the meet ing that the Vitruvius Club of Al pha Rho Chi' will hold an open house for all fraternities on Oct. 15. r Prexy to Speak President Milton S. Eisenhow er will speak at the annual dis trict convention of the Pennsyl vania State Education Association tomorrow in Altoona. By DAVE BRONSTEIN Announcements referring to the Sunday dress rule have been made on each floor unit since the first day of school, Dean said. ' The ruling as it was passed by cabinet stated that men shall wear collared shirts and slacks for' all evening meals, and coats and ties for Sunday dinner. This year, Dean said, each dorm will select its own dress for evening meals. West Dorm''' Council Monday night gave its approval to the Sunday dress rule. Nittany and Pollock Councils are expected to approve the ruling at their next meetings. Little opposition to the rule is expected. More and more dormi tory men are finding favor with the plan, Dean stated. Dean yesterday clarified the status of women guests in the West Dorm area. Women will be permitted, to enter the dormitory halls on Mother’s Day only, he said. - No action was taken on a recent case in which two women walked into the Hamilton resident hall. The women, unfamiliar with the college ruling, were escorted out of the halls by counselors. Neither were coeds; one was a sister of a resident she wished to visit. Coeds are not allowed in the small lounges of Hamilton and McKee. They may enter Waring lounge. Final Debate Tryouts Will Be Held Tonight Final tryouts for ,the men and women’s ‘ debate teams will be held at 7 tonight in Sparks Build ing. , Men debate tryouts will be held in 316 Sparks. Upperclasswomen who wish to join the women’s de bate team Will try out in 2 Sparks. Freshman women candidates need not try out for the team. ' Candidates must give a five minute talk on “Resolved: That the United States should' extend diplomatic recognition to the Communist government of Chi na.” Syracuse Films Tonight Movies of the Penh State-Syra cuse football game will- be shown tonight at 8 p.m. in Recreation Hall. ' The film is being sponsored by Androcles, junior men’s hat so ciety. ..There will be no admission charge. Yugoslavia, Dispute on TRIESTE, Oct. 5 (JP)— The cheers of 10,000 citizens massed in a great waterfront square pro claimed today that Trieste is Italian again. ' The,citizens gathered in Unity Square of this port city to re joice over the announcement in London that Italian and Yugo slav diplomats had initiated an agreement dividing the disputed free territory of Trieste between the two countries. The emotional outburst here carried a,note of relief that the long qtxarrel .which - sometimes threatened to draw Italians and Yugoslavs into a shooting war was over. In Rome, the Italian Senate stood solemnly as Premier Mario STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 6. 1954 continued their protest against an order banning intoxicants in fra ternity houses by ’ staging their second demonstration Tuesday evening, the Associated Press re ported yesterday. The university stated that the mass protests would have no ef fect on the order, but the demon strations continue. Some 450 new protesters parti cipated iri the latest demonstra tion, bringing the total of stu dents demanding the repeal of the University ban to 750. - ' Early Monday morning, some 300 students paraded to the cen ter of Lewisburg and stood in huddles shouting “We want beer” and various other slogans. Tuesday evening’s incident started with a bonfire on the §gm pus. Later the students again marched to the center of town, chanting the same slogans. It took four state policemen to,turn the trick. / Back to the campus they went and started the fire again. For three more hours the nor mally tranquil campus was alive with shouts for “beer!” One student stated that the demonstrations will continue un til “we get what we want.” During the two demonstrations, no one was injured. Borough and state police officials said there was no evidence of violence—just a lot of hollering. 24 Members Of FMA Sign Food Contracts Twenty-four members of the Fraternity Marketing Association signed contracts with the FMA stating that they will buy 100 per cent of either canned goods or meats through FMA vendors, Harold Perkins, assistant dean of men, said yesterday. Twenty member houses signed meat contracts while 16 signed for canned goods, Perkins stated. FMA Board of Control decided to accept 100 per cent contracts for either one category or the other. The board also stated, however, that members must buy 100 per cent in either one or the other categories, he said. > Three members didn’t sign con tracts. These fraternities Will be contacted by FMA and they will go into an inactive' status after Oct. 15. Although they will still be members of FMA, they will not be permitted to buy from ven dors and receive the FMA dis count, Perkins stated. Scelba announced with deep feeling: “After ten, years, the Italian flag again flies over the tower of the city of Trieste.” A singing, flag-waving crowd of young Italians paraded down Rome’s main street tonight, cele brating the settlement. Otherwise, Italy remained surprisingly calm. In Belgrade, President Marshal Tito’s Communist government of ficially termed its agreement with Italy “a reasonable compromise” in the interests of imprbved Ital ian-Yugoslav relations and world peace. . But the rejoicing among Trieste’s 280,000 residents, mostly Italian, was not restrained. Green,- white and red Italian flags, including FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Riots _Continue Over Bucknell Alcohol Ban Bucknell University students Italy Settle Trieste Peaceful Terms matt Committee of 50 Unveils 'Secret' Membership Eighteen persons affiliated with the University are mem bers of the “Committee of 50” which selected the name Mt. Nittany to be placed on the Nov. 2 ballot as an alternative to State College. „• The names of the committee members had been kept secret until yesterday. The “Committee of 50” had been harshly criticized by anti name change townspeople for tak ing an official act and remaining secret. John L. McLueas, vice presi dent of Haller, Raymond, and Brown, an engineering firm, is chairman of the group, which this summer selected Mt. Nittany as its proposed name for the Bor ough and then circulated peti tions to place the name on the ballot. On the committee are eighteen persons who presently hold or at one time held posts on the fac ulty or in the administration. Student On Committee One student at the University, Rufus Benton, sixth semester electrical engineering major from State College, is a member of the group. The majority of the members, however, are town businessmen or government officials. The ex ecutive committee members of “Friends of State College,” a group of townspeople organized to retain the name of State Col lege have not been selected yet. Milton S. McDowell, chairman of the group, said yesterday that he has been ill and unable to ap point an executive committee. To Be Named Soon He said, however, that he ex pects to have the committee named “in a day or 'two.” At a 'meeting Thursday, the group drafted a resolution giving authority to McDowell to appoint an executive committee to direct the anti-change campaign. Forces on both sides of the con troversy crystallized during the summer as two sets of petitions were circulated to legally put the question on • the State College ballot. v Letters Start Campaign The issue was raised when Penn State officially became a University on Nov. 13, 1953. Scores of letters-to-the-editor ap peared in the Centre Daily Times during the winter suggesting new names for the Borough or urging that the traditional name be re tained. Today, the issue is probably the most controversial one to face Borough voters since the Sunday movie issue several vears ago. ■ The “Committee of 50,” organ ized during the summer, had three main objectives': to gather enough signatures to place a new name on the ballot, to select the new (Continued on page eight) one 60-foot banner, decked the city in preparation for the arrival tomorrow of Maj. Gen. Edmondo de Renzi, the new Italian military governor. A message from British Maj. Gen. Sir John Winterton, com mander of the U.S.-British occu pied Zone A of the Trieste Ter ritory, announced to the citizens in Unity Square that the diplo mats in London had finally agreed. Their compromise gives Italy virtually all of Zone A, in cluding this strategic city, while the Yugoslavs get Zone B, which they have been occupying. Winterton said there would be a “short period” before the 3000 American and 2000 British occu pation troops pull out Who Is Who? See Page 4 Group Named To Establish Journ School A five-man committee has been named by President Milton S. Eisenhower to establish a School of Journalism at the University. Members of the. committee are Ben Euwema, dean of the Col lege of the Liberal Arts, chair man; Richard C. Maloney, assis tant dean of the College of the Liberal Arts; Lawrence Dennis, administrative assistant to the president; James W. Markham, associate professor of journalism, and Donald W. Davis, professor of journalism. The committee held its first meeting with President Eisenhow er Friday. Euwema emphasized the meeting was “purely organi zational” and said he had noth ing to report. He did say, however, that there is a possibility the school will be established by the end of the year. The committee is discussing the possibility of a School of Journal ism and Communications, to in clude all communication media study at the University. The committee has scheduled another meeting" for this week. Euwema said the committee will meet regularly. Members will dis cuss recommendations to be pre sented to President Eisenhower. Motorists Stopped In Traffic Survey Motorists entering and leaving State College were interviewed yesterday at a highway station operated as part of the State' High way department traffic and park ing survey. Information received will .be utilized for studying the parking situation and planning new traf fice routes, if and when they are needed. While this section of the sur vey was conducted, other workers continued their detailed study of parking facilities in all sections of the borough. Future stations will be set up on other entrances to State Col lege to aid the survey crew in analyzing the traffic patterns for the area. Draff- Regisrafion Due Male students 18 years old or older who have not registered with the selective service should do so at the Dean of Men’s Office, 109 Old Main. Five Plead Guilty in Woods Attack Five youths, who pleaded guilty to attacking a student arid his date in Hort Woods on Sept. 29, were arraigned on charges of disorderly conduct Tuesday evening. Each of the five boys paid $6.80 in fines and costs. ‘ Two other teen-agers, also involved in the same incident, were turned over to local juvenile authorities. State Police officers, who made the charges, sriid the boys were on the campus to steal dinks when they annoyed the student and his date' while they were sitting on a bench. FIVE. CENTS
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