PAGE FOUR Upperclassman Rushing By IFC in Full Swing Fraternity rushing of upperclassmen went into full swing yesterday with the is suing of a list of eligible upperclassmen by the office of the dean of men. Houses may rush upperclassmen this week if they are not affiliated with a frat ernity. Upperclassmen desiring to rush may sign up at the Hetzel Union desk, according to Daniel Land, IFC rushing chairman. Rushee must have either an All-University average of at least 2.0 or a 2.0 average for Council Serves As Liaison Unit In Ed College Education Student Council is a body of students elected to act as a median group between stu dents and faculty in the College of Education. Upperclass seats on Ed Coun cil are filled at spring elections by students enrolled in the edu cation college having a 2.5 All- University average. Freshman members will be elected in Oc tober. An annual trip to the United Nations is a project of the Coun cil. One member is sent to ob serve the UN at work with all expenses paid. Coffee hours are sponsored by the group to acquaint freshmen, sophomores, and transfer stu dents with upperclassmen and faculty members. Open house, held by the coun cil each spring, includes displays by each school in the Education College. Presentation of the Outstand ing Education Senior award is another council project. The award is made in the spring at a banquet honoring newly elected council members. Each student who has served on the council receives a certificate acknowledg ing service to the College of Edu cation. AIM Judicial Hears Discipline Cases in Dorms The Association of Independent Men Judicial Board of Review, one of the three student courts for undergraduate men, hears cases involving men living in campus dormitories. The board consists of eight members and a chairman. When a dormitory resident is accused of conduct detrimental to the name of the University and/or for conduct unbecoming of a student of the University and when the act occurs in or near a dorm, he will probably go be fore the group for a trial. Recommendations for punish merit, ranging from disciplinary probation to suspension, are made by the board to the dean of men's office. The office then decrees the punishment. Board chairman is David Sul livan, senior in electrical engi neering from Monongahela. See More Farmer Exchange Moves NEW YORK (IP)—Leaders of the Russian agricultural mission pre dict their two-month tour of the United States and Canada will be followed by more and more U. S.- Russia exchanges. Eleven members of the group held a final news conference at Idlewild Airport last night be fore leaving for home. Cachet Envelopes On Sale at HUB Centennial cachet envelopes, bearing the University's seal, the tower of Old Main, and a few lines about the University are on sale at the Hetsel Union desk. . The white envelopes, sold in groups of three for 5 cents, are a project of the Universtiy Stu dent Centennial Committee. Over 27,000 envelopes were sold during the birthday cele bration last February. The sale this fall will continue as long as there is a demand. Robert Krakoff, envelope chairman, announced. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA last semester (u nd e r the new grading system). Land said. Rushees may not stay in the house after 8 a.m. Sunday unless they have been pledged, Land added. As a service to fraternities, the University will permit the ex change of upperclassmen living in dormitories. The fraternities must provide another upperclass man to take the place of the one who is pledged by the fraternity, according to Robert Bullock, IFC president. Vendors soliciting fraternity houses must be registered with the Fraternity Affairs office and must present an official vendor's certificate, according to Robert Bullock. IFC presi dent. Registration blanks are avail able from Bullock, Delta Tau Delta, and Don Reidenbaugh, Sigma Chi. The replacement must be will ing to accept an assignment in Pollock Circle. All exchanges must be made in the office of the dean of men by 5 p.m. Sept. 23. Men transferring to dormitories must sign a contract with the department of food and housing and those to be released from dormitory contracts must report to Nittany 20 before 5 p.m. Sep tember 26, Bullock said. If replacements for men living in dormitories and wishing to pledge fraternities cannot be se cured, the men living in Nittany and Pollock may break their con tracts at the end of the semester. Unless notice is given, men liv ing in West Halls will not be able to break their contract at the end of the semester. 110TTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY lIT ALTOONA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY "Coke" Is a registered trodo•mark Q 193 E, THE COCA-COLACOMP 9 Scholarships At $lOOO Each To Be Given Nine scholarships, each worth $lOOO, will be available at the University this fall under a pro gram established by L. F. Teas, consulting geologist of Houston. The scholarships are available to sophomores in the fields of chemistry, geology, or geophysics and geochemistry. They may be renewed for the junior and senior years if the student continues to do satisfactory work. The scholarships, now known as the John and Elizabeth Holmes Teas Scholarships, were named in memory of the parents of Teas. Teas, a 1916 graduate of the University, established the pro gram anonymously in 1952 "to aid in the development of outstanding men." Candidates for the scholarships are nominated by the scholarship committees of the Colleges of Chemistry and Physics and Min eral Industries. The final appoint ment is made by President Milton S. Eisenhower. lAen's Glee Club Tryout Tryouts for the Men's Glee Club will be held at 7 p.m. for the rest of the week in 200 Car negie. Old members as well as ap plicants must tryout. So million times a day at home, at work or while at play Article Explains Prexy-Ike Tie The close relationship, both Personal, and advisory, between Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, Uni versity President, and his brother, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, is discussed in .an article in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post. Demaree Bess, an associate edi tor, states in his story, "When He Talks, Ike Listens," that Dr. Eis enhower has served the adminis tration in so many ways and is known to be so close to the Presi dent that his influence has been compared to that of two previous presidential confidants: Woodrow Wilson's Col. Edward M. House and Franklin D. Roosevelt's Har ry Hopkins. Iv :4, ,e OR earn muldnuad (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," ete.) ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH Today I begin my second year of writing this column for Philip Morris Cigarettes. Once every week during the coming school year I will take up, without fear or favor, issues that inflame the minds and quicken the hearts of college students everywhere. I will grapple with such knotty questions as: "Is compulsory attendance the reflection of an insecure faculty?" and "Is the unmarried student obsolete?" and "Are room-mates sanitary?" While each week I make a bold assault upon these burning issues, I will also attempt to beguile you into smoking Philip Morris Cigarettes. Into each column I will craftily weave some words in praise of Philip Morris. I will extol, ob liquely, the benign mild ness of Philip Morris's well-born tobacco, its soothing fragrance, its tonic freshness, its docile temperateness, its oh-so welcome gentleness in this spiky and abrasive world of ours. For saying these kind things about their ciga rettes, the Philip Morris Company will pay me money. This is the Ameri can Way. This is De mocracy. This is Enlight ened Self Interest. This is the System that Made Our Country Great, and anybody who doesn't like it is MALADJUSTED. Perhaps it would be well in this first column of the year to tell you a little about myself. I am 36 years of age, but still remarkably active. I am squat, moon-faced, have all my teeth, and am fond of folk dancing and Lotto. My hobby is collecting mucilage. I first took up writing because I was too short to steal. Bare foot Boy With Cheek was my maiden effort, and today, fourteen years later, I continue to write about college students. This is called "arrested de velopment" But I can't help it. Though I am now in the winter of my life, the prob lems of undergraduates still seem to me as pressing as ever. How to pursue a blaz ing romance with exams coming up next Friday in physics, history and French; how to convince your stingy father that life is a bitter mockery without a yellow convertible; how to subsist on dormitory food these remain the topics that roil my sluggish blood. And in this column from now until next June you will read of such things: of dating and pinning, of fraternities and sorori ties and independents, of cutting and cramming, of athletes and average-raisers, of extra-and intra-curriculum, of textbooks and those who write them and those who sell them and those who read them and those who don't. And, slyly woven into this stirring tapestry, the story of Philip Morris, America's gentle cigarette, in the handy Snap- Open pack, in king-size or regular, at prices all can afford. The makers of Philip Morris ore happy to be bath with you for another year of good reading and good smoking with sends Philip Morris, of coarse. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 14. 1955 Jobs for Meals Still Available Student employment for meals is still available in fraternities, campus dining halls, and The Lion's Den and Waring snack bars, John Huber, employment director, has announced. The work is offered only to men students Hiring off campus. It consists of approximately three hours of work a day. Applicants should not come to the Employment Service office until after registration, Mr. Hu ber said, because schedules are necessary in order to facilitate job referrals. This also includes applicants for jobs that must be distributed according to the stu dent's free time.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers