The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 17, 1955, Image 2

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    °AGE TWO
Three Students
Are Disciplined
Disciplinary action was taken on three students yester
lay, according to Harold W. Perkins, assistant dean of men.
Two of the students were involved in a fight on Jan. 19
and the other one was found cheating on a final examination
last semester.
A fourth semester mechanical engineering major was
given disciplinary probation for
fighting with a fifth semester
business administration major in
the East Dormitory area, Perkins
said. The fifth semester student
was given board probation which
requires him to report to the As
sociation of Independent Men Ju
dicial Board of Review at every
meeting. The board will review
his general behavior and release
him from probation when it feels
he has improved satisfactorily.
Activities Allowed
The fourth semester student
who was given disciplinary pro
bation will be allowed to continue
to participate in extra-curricular
activities, but he will not be per
mitted to hold office in any clubs
or organizations
,or be chairman
of any committees for one year.
He appeared before the AIM
Judicial B o ar d of Review last
Thursday. After his case was re
viewed the board recommended
to the dean of men's office that
he be placed on disciplinary pro
bation. The dean of men's office
accepted this recommendation
and informed the student of the
action.
'Punishment Not Fair'
The student said he felt that the
punishment was not fair and he
appealed the case yesterday to the
Senate Committee on Student Af
fairs subcommittee on disciplin
ary action. The subcommittee up
held the dean of men's decision
and the student was placed on
disciplinary probation for one
year.
Perkins said the student will
be expected to show that he can
act as a constructive citizen dur
ing his period of probation.
A sixth semester petroleum and
natural gas major was given a
deferred suspension after he was
found cheating. on a final exami
nation. The student entered his
instructor's office half an hour
after the examination and copied
some of the answers from the
master exam onto his paper.
While grading the papers the
instructor noticed that the stu
dent's answers did not follow logi-
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Speech Contest
Forms Ready )
Applicants for the Paul R. Gul
din Memorial Agriculture Speak
ing Contest may pick up applica
tion blanks and contest rules in
111 Agriculture, it was announced
yesterday.
The preliminaries of the con
test will be held on March 3. Each
participant will deliver a 5-min
uate speech. Those selected for
the finals will deliver a 10-minute
speech before the Agriculture
Student Council on March 8.
The contest is open to students
enrolled in the College of Agri
culture.
First prize in the contest will
be a gold medal and $5O, second
prize will be a silver .medal and
$25, and third prize will be $l5.
The deadline for applying is
Feb. 24.
Deland Will Address
Meteorological Society
Raymond Deland, meteorology
assistant, and Albert Miller, met
eorology instructor, will address
the American Meteorological So
ciety at 7:30 tonight in 121 Min
eral Industries.
Deland will speak on meteorol
ogy in Australia and Miller will
speak on meteorology in South
America.
The meeting is open to the pub
lic.
tally the figuring he had done to
get them. Upon inquiry the stu
dent admitted that he had copied
some of his answers from the mas
ter exam.
The actual sentence was sus
pension from the University, but
it was deferred until June. If at
the end of the semester the stu
dent is able to obtain, through the
dean of his college, recommenda
tion that he be continued as a
student, he will be allowed to en
roll in the fall at which time he
will be placed on disciplinary pro
bation.
EINE
CIGARETTES
c''t‘
ODERN SIZE
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COME PENNSYLVANIA
Players' Children of Darkness'
Has Wylie in_ Role of Strumpet
Wench, according to popular usage, means a racy woman; a strumpet. Wench, accord
ing to Ann Wylie, is the type of role any girl would like to play if she had the chance for
"a limited time."
Miss Wylie, an eighth semester education major, will be playing this role for a
limited time (six weekends) beginning at 8 p.m. tomorrow, on the Center Stage in the
Temporary Union Building, wilt Edwin Mayer's "Children of Darkness."
"Playing the role of Laetitia is
really a treat," Miss Wylie said,
"but heaven help me if people be
lieve I'm living the part. Laetitia
is a wench in the fullest sense of
the word."
Nobleman and Pools
"Children of Darkness" is a tale
of noblemen and poets imprisoned
at Newgate Prison in England
during the 1870's, who occupy a
room in the house of the jailer
by paying him money. •
"Kelly Yeaton, the director, has
even imported a special perfume
from New Orleans for the role
of Laetitia, which is, incidentally,
the only female role in the show,'
Miss Wylie continued. "The per
fume has been imported drinci
pally because it is the type of
perfume Laetitia would wear, and
because it will be unidentifiable
by
,the audience," she said.
Not a Newcomer
Miss Wylie is not exactly a
newcomer to campus dramatics,
having appeared in three Play
ers' shows and also in Thespians'
"Roberta," in which she plaSted
Sophie. Her first role was Lily
Garland, the female lead, in
"Twentieth Century" on the
Schwab stage, and she appeared
later that year in the "Lute Song"
company.
. Last year Miss Wylie played
Marian in the arena-typeproduc
tion of "On Approval." "We even
had a road-tour for the company,"
she said, "traveling to far-off Lan
caster and Altoona for two per
formances."
'Most Unusual Role'
"My most unusual role," she
replied to a question, "was that of
Hagga in a thesis production of
James Thurber's "The Thirteen
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By JOE BEAU-SEIGNEUR
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Old Main. I was the old woman
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The jewels were actually jelly
beans which she kept in her pock
ets, and when she was supopsed
to cry she grabbed a handful,
raised. them to her eyes and let
them fall.
'The children loved it," she
said, "but I doubt if I'll ever win
any prizes for that slight of hand."
• Tickets are available for "Chil
dren Of Darkness" for $1 at the
Student Union desk in Old Main.
'Lantern' , Stiff WIII Meet
The editorial staff of the Lan
tern, publication of the College of
Liberal Arts; Will meet at 7:30 to
night in 104 Willard.
Any student enrolled in the Col
lege of the Liberal Arts may work
for the magazine.
Programs
INVITATIONS
COMMERCIAL PRINTING
952 E. College Av
FEB. 23 & 24
(Minh, schedule for