'■''GE TWO ampaign in Third Day, CandidatesContinueVisits As the political campaign moves into the third day, candidates continue to circulate through the campus, fraternity, and town living units to contact students before the elections which are a week away. Campaigning, which started Monday, will continue until next Tuesday. Elections will be held next Wednesday and Thursday. According to the Lion party campaign schedule, its All-Univer sity candidates will visit Phi Ep silon Pi, Alpha Gamma Rho, Sig ma Pi, and Theta Kappa Phi and noon today .At 5:30 they will speak at Phi Delta Theta, Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Phi Delta, and Kappa Alpha Psi. Lion Parly Schedule HUB Meeting Will Launch Alumni Drive Central Pennsylvania alumni class agent" for the Centennial Alumni Drive will meet at 8 to night in the Hetzel Union Build ing for dessert and a business ses sion and not for a dinner as was incorrectly reported in yesterday’s Daily Collegian. About 200 class agents are ex pected to attend the meeting which will kick off the drive for $250,006 in alumni contributions. Milton S. Eisenhower, Ray S. Tannehill, general chair man of the Alumni Drive Ber nard P. Taylor, executive direc tor of the Penn State Foundation; and Dr. Marsh W. White, fund chairman for the Graduate School, will speak at the meeting. , Ridge Riley, executive secre tary of the Alumni Association, and Dr. Gerald B. Stein, presi dent of the Alumni Club of Cen tre County, will serve as chair men for the meeting. On Monday, Dr. f Eisenhower and others from the University will speak at a similar meeting for class agents in New York. Other meetings will subsequent ly be held in Philadelphia, Har risburg, Washington, D.C., Cleve land, Pittsburgh, Erie, and Buf falo. The class agents who attend these meeting will contact the other 46,000 living alumni of the University for donations to the alumni fund. Stoddart Receives National Award Charles W. Stoddart Jr., direc tor of extension in the College of Physical Education and Athletics, has been named one of 20 national winners in the second annual Nash Conservation Awards pro gram. Ed Zern, a well-known outdoors writer and graduate of the Uni versity announced the winners, 10 professional and 10 volunteer conservation workers, at the North American Wildlife Confer ence in Montreal. Stoddart will receive a bronze plaque. The 10 professional con servation winners will be award ed $5OO. 3usiness Fraternities Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta Sigma Pi, national commerce pro fessional fraternities, will hold a combined meeting at 7:15 p.m. to morrow at Sigma Pi. A member of the National Association of Manufacturers will speak. Pledges of the groups may at tend. Lion party senior class candi dates will campaign at Sigma Phi Alpha, Alpha Chi Sigma, Zeta Beta Tau, and Sigma Alpha Mu and will visit Phi Sigma Del ta, Chi Phi, and Alpha Epsilon Pi at dinner. Junior class candidates will speak at Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Triangle, Phi Kappa Sigma, and Kappa Sigma at noon and at Phi Kappa Tau and Delta Chi during dinner. State Party Schedule State party All-University can didates are scheduled to speak at Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Triangle, Phi Kappa Sigma, and Kappa Sigma at noon today and at Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Delta Rho, Pi Kappa Alpha, and Delta Chi dur ing the evening meal. Senior class candidates will visit Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Delta Rho, Pi Kappa Alpha, and Delta Chi at lunch time and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Triangle, Phi Kappa Sigma, and Kappa Sigma this evening. Junior class candidates will visit Delta Upsilon, Acacia, Phi Epsilon Pi, Sigma Pi, .:nd Beaver House at 12:30 and Theta Xi, The ta Delta Chi, Alpha Sigma Phi, and Phi Kappa at 5:30. Invited to AIM Meeting According to Rae DelleDonne, clique chairman, State party can didates have been invited to at (Continued on page eight) Local APX to Become National The Vitruvius chapter of Alpha Rho Chi will be installed as a chapter of the national fraternity at ceremonies to be held Thurs day through Sunday. Alpha Rho Chi is a national professional architecture fraterni ty. The program for the four-day affair has been announced as fol lows: Tomorrow and Friday: arrival of guests and national officers and tours of the University and de partment of architecture. Saturday: the initiation of members followed by a dinner at the Hetzel Union Building. Sunday: installation and grant ing of the charter to the chapter followed by attendance at the chapel service. National Officers National officers participating will include Robert Calrow, wor thy grand architect, Minneapolis, Minn.; and George Whitten, wor thy grand estimator, Wimetta, 111. Fifteen members of Demetros chapter at Ohio State University will also participate. Among others to attend are Dwight Eby of Columbus, Ohio, THE DAItY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Eng Council Will Elect President Engineering Student Council will elect a president and discuss the newly proposed constitution March 29. The council at its last meet ing discussed dissatisfaction among engineering students con cerning the quality of service courses given outside the Col lege of Engineering and Archi tecture. The council also discussed the awarding of keys to council members. The problem of the quality of the service courses given outside the college was discussed by Clar ence E. Bullinger, head of the industrial engineering depart ment and chairman of the Senate Committee on Courses of Study. Bullinger said service courses are non-techniqal or humanistic studies required of students in the College of Engineering and Ar chitecture. When Bullinger was asked whether the course could be taught in the engineering college, he replied that the college could teach economics of a particular engineering field but not general economics. Jn discussing the, awarding of keys to council members, the council decided to award keys to members not having more than two absences for one semester or to members who had more than two absences but had done “out standing work on the council.” In other action the council ap proved a motion providing for an insurance policy for the student computing machines. Rod and Coccus Club Several graduate students will explain and demonstrate their re search projects at a meeting of the Rod and Coccus Club at 7 to night in 206 Patterson. Refreshments will be served. and Elliott Whitacre, former pro fessor of architecture at the Uni versity, now of Ohio State. Members of the University fac ulty. will include Milton S. Os borne, professor and head of the department of architecture; M. Robert Des Marais, assistant pro fessor of architecture and adviser to the local chapter; and Louis A. Richardson, professor of architec tural engineering. All are faculty members of the chapter. The Vitruvius chapter now has an active membership of 18 stu dents, a pledge clas~ of eight, sev en alumni members, three faculty members, and three members who have withdrawn from the Univer sity. Started by Des Marais The local chapter was started through the efforts of Des Marais, who was a member of the frater nity at the University of Illinois. The first meeting of the Vitru vius chapter was held Oct. 12, 1953 and two months later the chapter was granted a charter by the University. Greek Week Sing To Begin Tomorrow Greek Week will officially get underway tomorrow night with the preliminaries of the Interfratemity-Panhellenic Council Sing. Forty-three groups have entered the sing according to Francis Taylor, sing co-chairman. Taylor said entries are higher this year than ever before. Last year 38 groups participated. Judges for the sing are Frank Gullo, associate professor of music; Raymond Brown, assist ant professor of music; Barry Brinsmaid, assistant professor of music; Eugene Fulmer, secretary of the State College Area Cham ber of Commerce; and two mem bers of the State College High School music faculty. Tomorrow’s preliminaries will be held at 7:30 p.m. in 110 Elec trical Engineering. Further eli minations will be held Friday at 7 p.m. in 110 Electrical Engineer ing. The finals will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday in the State College High School Auditorium. The finals will be broadcast at 9 p.m. Sunday over WMAJ. Rotating Trophy A • winning fraternity and a winning sorority will be chosen. A rotating trophy will be given to the first place winners In each class and a plaque will be pre sented to the first two places in each class. Under a new rule instituted last year, a group that wins for three years in a row will receive a per manent trophy. Sing Alma Mater Each fraternity' will sing the Alma Mater and one chapter song. Each sorority will sing two chap ter songs, Groups will be eliminated in the preliminaries by single elimi nation. The finalists will be an nounced at the conclusion of Fri day night’s program. Taylor has requested that any group wishing to drop from uie sing notify him by 7 p.m, tomor row. He also asked that all groups be present at least 15 minutes be fore the time they are scheduled. Singing will begin at 7:30 to- The group was granted admis sion to Interfraternity Council in January, 1954, and the first pledge class of 20 men was initiated In May, 1954. OK'd by University Last fall the group moved into a chapter house at 220 E. Foster avenue. In November, the chap ter was granted permission by the University to affiliate with the national. Officers of the chapter are pres ident Lee Stauffer, tenth semester architectural engineering major; vice president, John Booser, eighth semester architectural en gineering major; secretary, Charles Bailey, sixth semester architectural engineering major; treasurer, Russell Snyder, eighth semester architectural engineer ing major; and historian, Fred Diseroad, eighth semester archi tectural engineering major. The local chapter is named af ter Marcus Vitruvius Pollio, a Roman architect and engineer who lived in the first century IB.C. ; Rent a Formal for IFC See blur's Large Selection Now 1.F.C.-Panhel Ball is coming soon so vfhy wait until the last minute. Stop in today and rent your Tun for this big dance. Hur's has the largest selection of formats in Centre County. You can pick yours out now and forget about last minute worries of getting your Tux. Be wise and stop in today at Hur's Men's Shop, and get your formed for LF.C. Httr a JKtttV Opposite OM Main tmxMbA'r. march M. t m IFC Contest Regulations Announced Entries may now he submitted for the first fraternity writing contest, Carl Saperstein, Ihterfra temjty Council public relations chairman, has announced.- The object of the contest, ac cording to Saperstein, is to pro mote a batter understanding of the fraternity system. Entrants will be required to write a 20QO to 2500 word essay on the topic “Why Fraternity. The contest is open to any broth er or pledge of any IFC member fraternity. All entries must be turned in to the Hetzel Union desk in the HUB by May 7. Essays should be typewritten, double spaced. Judg* ing will be based on originality, content, and persuasiveness to the general public. Judges will be an nounced later, Saperstein said. Saperstein said a suitable prize will be awarded to the winner. He also said that arrangements have been made to print ttit win ning article in Pittsburgh area papers. morrow, with five minutes al lotted for each group. Those singing tomorrow In order we: Alpha Ten Omen, Kappa Kappa Gapime, Phi Kappa Pat, Phi Me. Alpha Epsilon PI, Delta Sigma Lambda, Alpha Gamma Delta, PI Kappa Phi, Alpha Omicroh PI, Phi Slams Kappa* Chi Omega, Delta 1 Zeta, Theta Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Delta. Delta Delta, Phi Kappa Sigma, Pi Beta Phi. Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Pi, Sigma Delia Tab. Phi Siglaa Delta. Those singing Friday are: Beta Signut Omieron, Phi Kappa, Alpha XI Delta, Al- Sha Gamma Rho, Kappa Alpha Thata, cacia, Delta Gemma, Phi Gamnig Delta, Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha OKI Rho, Delta Chi, Kappa Delta, Delta Sigma Phi, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Zeta, Gamma ?hl Beta, Chi Phi. Beta Theta Pi, Alpha' Chi Sigma, Tan Kappa Epsilon. Pi Kappa Alpha. CHUCK WAGON SPECIALS SLOPPY JOE BURGERS 25c TRIPSHAKE (3 dips of tee cream) 30c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers