PACT rVM CheromPhys Group Favors Grading System Change Chemistry-Physics Student Council last night voted over whelmingly to support a suggestion made by Rudolph butter, fifth semester arts and letters major, that, a change be made in the present ,grading system. Lutter, who presented hi versify Cabinet on Dec. 15, Chairmen Plan New Combined Open House By AL KLIMCKE Committee chairmen from each college of the University will meet Jan. 12 to discuss plans for a com bined open house program to be held April 22, it was decided by the Inter College Council Board last night. The colleges are combining their open house program this year in vi,:w of the Centennial celebra tion. Students from all high schools in Pennsylvania will be invitea to become acquainted with the facilities of the University. In previous years each college planned and carried out its own house program, each usually at a uifferent time. Each program dis played only the facilities of the particular college having the open house. The officers of the colleges feel chat by combining and coordinat ing their efforts this year each college itself, and the University in general, will be benefitted. 1 7 :ames of committee chairmen released by the Board last night are: Pat Farrell, Physical Educa tion; William Childs, Chemistry and Physics; Bernard Carson, En gineering; Bruce Lieska and Don ald Fleck, Mineral Industries, and Douglas Moorhead, Agriculture. Cabinet Personnel Interviewing Committee, interviewed 23 appli-, cants for Centennial committee last night. CPIC is 'composed of the members of ICCB, who are thy. presidents of the coll e g e councils. Club to Hear Talk By Cave Explorer David Fenstermacher, vice pres ident of the Nittany Grotto, will talk on spelunking and show slides of nearby caves at a meet ing of the cabin and trail division of the Penn State Outing Club at 7:30 tonight in 121 Sparks. The entire club will hold an ice skating party at Beaver Dam Sunday, with supper and dancing at the Stone Valley Forestry Cabin. The group will leave from in back of Old Main at 2 p.m. Dairy Club Officers To Be Elected Tonight Election of officers will be held by the Dairy Science Club at 7 tonight in 117 Dairy. The following slate of officers has been nominated: David Mor row, Darwin Braund, president; Edward Glass, Karl Hellerick, vice president; Neil Bowen, William Smith and Norman Schue, secre tary; and Edward Wickersham, Thomas Kcstenbader, and Louis Galliker, treasurer. CorrectFora Robert Jackson, graduate stu dent in dairy science, who was identified in yesterday's Daily Collegian in connection with an automobile accident was not in volved in the accident. AIM Board to Meet The Association of Independent Men's Judicial Board of Review will meet at 7:15 tonight in 213 Willard. University to Offer Coed Sports Sundays Co-ed recreation will be sponsored from 7 to 9 p.m. ev ery Sunday in Recreation Hall by the Colle7e of Physical Ed ucation and Athletics and the Physical Education Student Council. Volleyball, basketball, table tennis and badminton will be available to all students free of charge. By JACKIE HUDGINS recommendations to All-Uni as appointed by Cabinet as a committee of one to look into the grading situation. He told the council that the system should be changed so that students' grades could be recorded more accurately than they are under the present 3-2-1-minus 1 and minus 2 system. Lutter said he planned to ex plain the inequalities which he believes exist in the grading sys tem to all the student councils to see if there is sufficient interest to justify fiirther study. If student interest is evident. he said, a defi "ite grading system will be set up and recommended to the Cabinet. In his Cabinet. retort Lutter ex plained a hvnothetical comparison between the grades of two stu dents at the University. both ear ,'ving i 8 academic credits. One clndent. Lutter said. might get 90's. nr a scant 3.0 grade av erage in three three-nredit courses. find SO's or scant 2.0 grade aver naps in his other three three-credit o irses. The other student might get 89's. barely missing 3.0 grade av era 0 - es, in each of his six three -rarlit courses. The first student would receive 45 quality mints under the pre sent system. giving him an All- TTniversitv average of 2.5 and dean's list rank. His numerical exr-de average would be 85. The second student's 36 quality noints would give him an All- University average of 2.0. His nu merical grade average would be 89. higher than the student who mad. , dean's list. Two Proposals Suggested Lotter suggested two proposals `-• Cabinet as remedies for this situation. 1. Keeping separate the amount of work done and the quality of work done. This, he said, could be done by totaling the number of credits to determine whether a student had the required number necessary to graduate, and mark ing the quality of work on the same basis as it is now. This would necessitate setting up a dual-grade system, however, Lutter said. , 2. Multiplying the numerical (Continued on page eight) Play arbles on New Year's Eve By INEZ ALTHQUSE How would you like to spend New Year's Eve eating cup cakes and playing Marbles on the floor of a log cabin 200 miles north of Toronto, Can ada, with two feet of snow on the ground and the temperature 21 degrees below zero. This was only one of the ex periences of the seven officers of the Penn State Outing Club dur ing their week's visit to Brule Lake Dec. 26 to Jan. 1. Francis Gordon, an adviser to the club and a famous Canadian guide, was host to the group at his cabin on the lake. The group met in Union City Dec. 26 and traveled by car to Kerney, Ontario. There it boarded a logging train and made the last 27 miles of the journey to Brule Lake in four hours, the regular time taken by the train to make the trip. The little settlement, which is now a part of Algonquin Provin cial Park, consists of a few cabins that were built during logging operations in the area. A sawmill there burned down, and most of the people left the lake. Only a few remain today. The weather at the lake was the warmest in 70 years, an old na tive of that country told the group. (It seems the regular temperature for this time of year is 40 degrees THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNVILVAAIIP4 Revert to Cabinet Men, Coeds To Debate '1 Day Off' Demands for more rights for women will be asserted Friday night at the annual Mount Mercy- Penn• State co-ed debate.. Two women from Mount Mercy College, PittsbUrgh, will meet two University men debaters on the topic "Resolved: that the house wife should have one day a week off." Upholding men's righ+s and the seven-day, work week for housewives will be Robert Hawk, sixth semester arts and letters ma jor, and Nick Starnateris, fifth se mester arts and- letters major The debate will begin at 8 p.m. in 121 Sparks. The debate will be the 15th in a yearly series of debates between the two schools. Each year the teams meet first at the University and then .at Mount Mercy. This yea'r's exchange debate will be Feb. 15. The topics always are similar —the women supporting an argu ment which, if put into effect, would increase women's prestige and . the men challenging it to pre serve the male ego. While the debates are held in formal debate style, there is usu ally considerable humor injected along with the arguments. The debate will be conducted in the Oregon, ' cross-question style. In this style, a speaker from each side presents a ten minute constructive speech in which the side's major arguments are pre sented. Then the second speakers are cross-questioned by the oppo sition. Each side also is -given a chance to summarize the debate and present the conclusions he feels have 'been reached. • Members of the audience also will be given a chance to chal lenge the debaters on the opinions they have expressed and to put forth their personal viewpoints. The debate will be open to the public. Pi Omega •Pi Meeting Pi Omega Pi, business educa tion honorary society, will hold an open meeting for, business education majors at 7 tonight in 317 Willard. A panel of business education student teachers will discuss their teaching experiences. No Double Parking Stale College police have is- Sued a warning that it will be- ' gin strict enforcement against double parking violations. below zero with at least five feet of snow.) The cabin, built by Gordon, is a typical log cabin, well insulated against the cold. 411 cooking and baking during the week was done on a wood range. Water had to be gotten from •the lake by sink ing a bucket throUgh a hole in the ice. In order to ice skate the seven Members had to clear a circle on the ice, which was completely cov ered by a two-foot snowfall: They also built a ski slope, and by hanging lanterns on trees along the trail were able to enjoy night skiing. One night the party took an NITTANY (LEANERS -- equal to any occasion Our cleaning and pressing make a smooth pair that will meet your most discriminating taste ! Summer Employment Information Ready Information on applications and interviews for summer employment in boys and girls camps in Pennsylvania and the northeastern United States is now available at the Stu dent Employment Service office' in Old Main, according to Jack Huber, director of the employnient service. Folders of information on all the camp employment available are kept at the office. Huber said although many camps have al ready requested applicants, many more are expected to do so during January and February. Information on employment at summer resorts throughout the United States will be available during February and March, Hu ber said. Huber stressed the fact that there will be no shortage of sum mer employment at " camps and resorts. In fact, he said, there will probably be many more jobs than there will be applicants for them. However, he cautioned ,that the best jobs will be gotten by those Who apply early. Salary ranges in the jobs depend mostly on ex perience and age, Huber said. Most of the camps request gen eral counselors and instructing specialists.. Most require at least a minimum of experience, and preference is usually given to ap plicants with some experience. Most of the camps mention as a prerequesite at least one year of college and a genuine interest in young children. Some require a minimum age of 19. Camps which have already re quested applicants are: Federa tion Employment Service for 47 camps for Jewish boys and girls in New York; Association of Pri vate Camps, with 300 member camps in northeastern United States; The American Camping Associ ation's New York section; Camp Redwing and Camp Wirmicut for Girl Scouts, in Allegheny Co.; Camp . Sun Mountain, Shawnee; Island Lake Camps, Wayne Co.; Camp Cherrydale, Cheyney; Camp Seneca Hunt, Effort. Camp Hugh Beaver in the Pocono Mountains; Camp Tel Hai, Bucks Co.; Camp Skymount, Green Lane„ Camp To-Loa, Way mart; Happy Hollow Day Camp, Elkins Park; Furnace, Hills Camp for Girl Scouts, Lancaster; Camp Tanal o, Stroudsburg; Camp Indiandale, Vinemont; Camp Winneshewauka, Vermont, Grove Point Camp overlooking Chesapeake Bay; Camp Acquacka rronk, Passaic, N.J.; Camp Scatica, Elizaville, N.Y.; Camp Echo, Burlingham, N.Y.; Pioneer Y o ut h Camp, N.Y.; Cejwin Camps, N.Y. and Masonic Camp Seven in N.Y overnight snowshoe trip to Tim berwolf Lake, five miles. away. The return trip was made in a snowstorm. "The Canadians were the most friendly people I have ever met in my life," Bruce' Lieske, presi dent of the club, said in com menting on the trip. One of the group, Gerald Franc, even had a chance to fire the logging train on the way to the cabin. The main purpose of the trip was to plan activities for the Out ing. Club ioi next semester. Color slides were taken during the week, arid will be shown to the club when they are developed. • 1/ . • tell 4! and welcome back''all students. We hope you had an enjoyable holiday. Continue to enjoy yourself by coming to Barnard Tea Room for .one of their delicious home-cooked meals. fi tel.-. < ; Barnard Tea Room 110 S. Bainard (I block west of Atherton) THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1955 Scholarship Offered Sophs In Engineering Two scholarships of $5OO each are being offered to engineering sophomores for the junior and senior years by the Cincinnati Milling Machine Company. To' be eligible for renewal of a scholar ' ship, the student must have main tained a satisfactory record . dur ing his junior year. Details of the application pro cedure may be obtained from Dean E. B. Stavely, chairman of the Committee of Scholarships, College of Engineering and Archi tecture. Stavely's office is 204 Main Engineering. The scholarships are intended for mechanical, electrical, indus trial engineering, and engineer ing science students. The scholarship awards will be made on the basis of character, personality, scholastic record, par ticipation in extracurricular activ ities, work interests, and finan cial needs. If the scholarship holder de sires, he may apply for summer work in the company's regular 4,C100-hour graduate training pro gram. The work experience, which could be scheduled for the sum mers following the sophomore and junior years, would be credited to the student upon graduation-- provided both the student and the company agree to the continua tion of employment. Paiice Investigate Apartment Robbery Borough police are investigat ing the robbery Saturday night, of two clocks and a ring from the apartment of Melvin Mason, sev enth semester physical education major, an d William Fingrutd, ninth semester metallurgy major. ' Se--eral leads have been investi gated, according to a report from the. borough police yesterday. Aspoturian to Address Officers Association Dr. Vernon Aspaturian, assistant professor of political science, who is considered to be an authority on the Russian, people and their techniques, will address the Cen tre County chapter, Reserve Offi cers Association, at 6:30 tonight at the Corner Room. Dr. Aspaturian's subject will be "Does a Reserve Officer Need Training in Political Science?" Programs INVITATIONS COMMERCIAL PRINTING 352 E. College Ave. Welcome '55 Ph. AD 8-8311