MPAY Fe%VARY B. 19155 WD Council To Elect President West and election for West Dorm Council president will be held Monday, the Council de cided last night. President Stanley Juras had an nounced last semester that he would resign as soon as a replace ment could be elected. During the one-hour session, the Council set up the following qual ifications for nomination and elec tion: 1.0 Average Needed 1. Candidates must be in good standing with the University and have a 1.0 All-University average, besides living in the West Dorms. 2. Candidates will nominate themselves, but council members must approve the nominees. 3. Candidate must agree to give nomination and acceptance speech ea. 4. There will be no maximum number of nominations, but a min imum of 2 has been set. Council Will •lots 5. Only members of Council will Vote. Voting will be done by secret balloting. 6. The new president will accept his polit Feb. 21. The council also decided to hold a series of mixed dinners in the Waring Dining Halls. The first of the dinners is planned for Feb. 18, with one being held every other Week for the next six weeks. Poor Coed Attendance Council also discussed the poor attendance of the women students at these dinners. It was noted that only 68 per cent of the coeds at tended the last coed dinner. Council discussed the need for a milli lounge to be open to wo men students on weekends. The West Dorm TV lounges were sug gested. Action was tabled until the next meeting. 24-Hour Calling Sought Also, a committee of one was set up to explore the posibilities of . 24-hour calling within the dorms. At present, no calls can be made within the dorms after noon. The following items were tabled until the next meeting: the secur ing of soap for washrooms, the awarding of trophys to outstand ing students of the West Dorms; and the purchasing of first aid kits for dormitory units. Because of election, the Council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Mc- Kee Lounge. Outing Club to Meet The Field and Stream Division of the Penn State Outing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 317 Willard. Plans for a forthcoming canoe trip will be discussed, along with other special events on the se mester agenda, including th e building of a rifle range. TATS GRACE KELLY STEWART GRANGER "GREEN FIRE" CINEMASCOPE Doors Open 6 p.m. Alec Guinness "THE DETECTIVE" Accidents (Continued from page one) The driver and one other stu dent was uninjured. They were Dale Meder, second semester aero nautical engineering major, driver, and Lynn Montague, fourth se mester home economics major. The accident occurred between Philipsburg and Port Matilda. Miss Parks, who was pinned be neath the auto was taken to Phil ipsburg Hospital. Damage was es timated by Meder at $2OO. Slippery Road 2. An auto containing four Uni versity students skidded on a slip pery road outside Lewistown on Tuesday and nearly demolished another auto, slightly injuring two of the students. Margaret Gysling, sixth semes ter education major, suffered a cut above her eye, and John Lenarets, third semester chemical engineer ing major, received a cut mouth. Driver of the car was John Keyes, second semester electrical engineering major, who said he skidded to one side of the road and ran headlong into the car of Mrs. Jay Fultz, Belleview. 3. Samuel Lewis, fourth semes ter education major, crashed his auto into a milk truck five miles west of Dushore on Rt. 87 an Wed nesday, causing the truck to tip over, blocking the highway with milk cans. Neither Lewis nor another stu dent in his car, Ursula Leunis, fourth semester home economics NOW NE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA PUT A major, were injured in the acci dent which inflicted $2OOO dam age to the truck and $2OO to Lew is' car. Two Cars Damaged 4. Two cars operated by William Hartman, fifth semester electrical engineering major, and Mrs. Floyd Weaver of Rt. 1, State College, failed to stop for stop signs on the corner of Pollock road and Shortlidge road on Thursday. Both cars were damaged, ac cording to Capt. Philip A. Mark of the Campus Patrol, although no one was injured. 5. Richard McDonough, gradu ate student in speech, was injured in an auto accident about two weeks ago near Lewistown. No information has been received as to whether his skull was frac tured in the accident, as originally feared. Three-Car Accident 6. Frank Heavner, a graduate student in engineering, was in volved in a three car accident on Jan. 28 in State College. Heavner's car was hit by Austin Kendall of Troy when the Kendall machine skidded on the ice. Heavner's car was pushed into a car operated by John Gresh of Bellefonte RD 1. Total damage was estimated at $lOO. 7. James Barkley, first semester business administration student, Was involved in an auto accident on January 25, in State College. The Barkley auto collided with a car driven by Roy Fogleman of Lemont. Damage to the machines was estimated at $4O. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~; ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ : ~ ~ ~ < ~~ ~ ~ ~ $44,290 in Grants Given to University Five scholarships totaling $44,290 have been presented to the University. A sixth scholarship for a foreign student to study at the University has also been given. Perle Mesta of Washington, D.C., a former envoy and minister to Luxembourg, has provided a scholarship for foreign students which will pay the transportation costs of the student, his living ax penses at the University, and his books and other incidentals. The University will not require the student to pay fees. A $lOO hotel administration scholarship has been established by the Shuck Hotels to encourage students in the field. The scholar ship is for juniors and seniors and will be awarded on the basis of scholarship, potential leadership and financial need A freshman or sophomore may be given the award in cases of unusual merit or need. Two fellowships in the fields of chemistry and chemical engi neering have been established by the Shell Companies Foundation, Inc. The $l5OO fellowship was es tablished to encourage graduate studies in these fields. Shares of stock totaling $28,000 have been added to the Edwin L. Dr ak e Memorial Scholarship Fund, by John P. Herrick of Ol ean, New York, who is an oil pro ducer, author, and a member of IN YOUR SMOKING! PAGE THIRTEENI the Penn Grade Crude Oil Asso ciation. To qualify for the scholarships which pay $223 a year to Penn sylvania students and $443 to non residents of Pennsylvania, stu dents must be enrolled in the Col lege of Mineral Industries arid must be interested in the study of either geology, mineralogy, or pe troleum engineering. Financial need will also be taken into con sideration. A scholarship valued at $8,390 has been presented to the Univer sity by George T. Deike of Pitts burgh, a 1903 graduate of the Uni- Versity and vice president of the Board of Trustees. Requirements for the scholar. ship, which was established by Mr. Deike in memory of his son, a 1930 graduate of the University who died in 1939, are based on fi nancial need, character qualities of leadership , scholastic ability, (Continued on page fourteen) . . . • • • • ••• •:. :•:. ...• •••.:•• • •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers