PanheUenic Judicial to Try Rushing Code Violation The PanheUenic judicial committee met yesterday to dis cuss a reported violation of the rushing code, according to Joanne Caruso, PanheUenic president and chairman of the judicial committee. The violation was presented by two sororities against a third. The violation concerned a verbal invitation to a coffee hour to a rushee by a sorority mem ber rather than through the Pan hellenic post office. Judicial To Meet The Judicial committee will meet Wednesday to hand down its decision, according to Miss Caruso. She said that the decision was not made yesterday because she was unable to contact all the members of the committee. She also said that a report has bfeen made to the National Pan hellenic Association for possible recommendation of penalty. This violation has never occurred be fore, she said. The Panhellenic rushing code specifies that all rushing viola tions be dealt with by the judicial committee comprised of the offi cers of the council, a representa tive from the dean’s office, a stray Greek (a sorority member whose sorority has no chapter at the university), and the Panhel lenic rushing chairman. Procedure Requires Complaint The procedure for reporting a violation requires that two copies of the complaint be given to the committee by the sorority report ing the violation. One is signed and kept by the committee; the other is unsigned and given .to the accused group. The accused group is given a chance to pre sent its case before the commit tee. Tlje committee then investi gates both sides and hands down its decision. Bids Out Today Coffee hours Sunday night end ed the major part of formal rush ing. Only bidding and ribboning today and tonight remain on the rushing agenda. A semi-strict silent period is still in effect, however, between sorority mem bers, and rushees .until bids go out this afternoon. , The rushees signed their pref erential cards' Sunday night be tween 10 and : 12 in their resi-' dence hall following the coffee hours. The sorority bid lists were turned in Monday morning at 10 to the dean of women’s office. More Time Allowed Concert -Xr, Membership For G>ncert Will Begin The annual Community Con cert Association membership campaign in State College will begin Monday with a meeting in the Hetzel Union Building. Names of unit chairmen for the drive were announced yesterday by Leland S. Rhodes, campaign chairman. Present members will have the opportunity to renew their mem berships this week. They will be called about their renewals by volunteer workers, but Rhodes suggested that per sons who have not been contacted should get in touch with the chairman for their unit. Renew als and new memberships are $6. During the campaign, a head quarters will be established in the HUB. Unit chairmen who met Sunday to organize their program in cluded: Dr. Robert W. Stone, agricul ture; Edward N. Dubois, business administration; Dr. Ralph G. Ascah, chemistry, ahd physics; Dr. Palmer C. Weaver, education; Mrs. Frances Forbes, engineering and architecture; Jane A. Bovie, home economics; Richard C. Ma loney, the liberal arts; Dr. Hans Neuberger... mineral . industries; Lillian E. Lohrman, physical edu cation and athletics. Dorothy C. Jones, library; Thomas Hammonds, general ex tension; Leland S. Rhodes, re tirees; Sara E. Case, administra tion; Lt. Col. Edmund H. Lang, Army; Cmdr. Robert K. Etnire, Navy; Col. Daniel F. Riva, Air Force; and Mrs. J. Carpenter Hess, town. Stanley F. Michalski, of Nan ticoke, a senior in music educa tion, is directing the drive .among students. UCA Course Hours Are Set The voluntary courses In reli gion offered by the University Christian Association have, been scheduled fpr the following hours: Essentials, of the Christian Faith, 4:10 pan. Monday; Intro duction ■to the Old Testament, 4:10 p.m> Tuesday; Introduction to the New. Testament, 4:10p.m. Wednesday; College Life in Three Dimensions, 3:10 p.m. Thursday; The. Development of Protestant ism, 4:10 p.m. Thursday. Ciasses will begin meeting to day in the UCA offices, 304 Old Main for the 50 students who have registered for the courses. Students, who .not yet en rolled may do so at the first meet ing of each class. Coed Lifesaving Class Meeting Time Changed The Tuesday women’s senior lifesaving' class will meet from 8 to 10 tonight in White Hall. The class regularly meets from ? to 9 p.m., but was changed to night because of sorority, activi ties. . .... Freshmen should not register for class because late permissions cannot be granted. Next semes ter, however, a" lifesaving course will be open to freshmen. Scrolls Will Meet in HUB Scrolls, senior women’s hat so ciety, will meet at 12:30 p.m. to day m the Student Activities Of fice in the Hetzel Unoin Building. ttoG DAILY*COUKJIAN, StATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Pearl 6. Weston, Dean of Wom en, said the time lapse this year between the turning in of the bid lists and picking up of the. accept lists was a day longer to allow for a doublecheck of prefer-, ences and bids.- This, she. said, would eliminate mistakes, such as last year when two girls were ribboned by the wrong sorority. The bid lists will be given to. the sorority rushing chairmen at 4 p.m. today in the dean of wom en’s office. Bids will be. distri buted at apprpximately 5 p.m. and contrary to the rushing hand book will be slipped under the women’s doors not picked up at the office of the dean of women. Ribboning will take place at 7 tonight in the suites. Centennial Lore Campus Plagued by One of the ironies of the Uni versity’s history is that for many of its one hundred .years, the in stitution operated under a mis nomer. When it was offering work of collegiate rank and' granting bachelor’s degrees, it was called thr High School of Pennsylvania. Later when most of its stu dents were studying engineering and the sfcienceb, it was called the Agricultural College of Penn sylvania. Then, for nearly 80 years, while it was a great education al institution larger than many universities, it was still known as a ccdlege. Proposed by Society The name, Farmers’ High School, was proposed' by the Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society, which was the prime mover in the establishment of the institution in 1&& Musical Oroui Orchestra Announces Personnel Fifty-three persons have been accepted into the Symphony Or chestra, Theodore K. Karhan, as sociate professor of music and music education, has announced. The group is rehearsing for sev eral performances this semester including their concert scheduled for January. Part of the orchestra will accompany the performance of the “Mikado” which is being put on jointly by Players and the music department. Orchestra Members Members of the Orchestra are: Violin I—John Ryan, Barbara Thomas, Holly Hildebrand, Lois Kerner, Linda Gerber, Austin Wells, and Walter Jessel. Violin II Jeanne Maxwell, Virginia Mensch, John Stoner, Dale Wilcox, Carl Volz, Ernest Torok, George Campbell, and El lin Huttel. Viola Lenore Babione, Jay Nace, Lanice Moore, and Lois Jones. Cello Henrietta H e r t z o g, Carmen Cavuto, Nancy Limber ger, William Neal, and Jo Ann Sharp. Flute Marion Berry, Mary Lou Meyer, and Dorothy Becker. Oboe Frances O’Connell, James Lessig, and Mary Ann Wert. Clarinet—Thomas Mentzer, and James Valone. One Bass Clarinet * Bass clarinet Lynn Witmer. Bassoon Charles Brechler, and Edward Spondike. Horn William Mills, Kenneth Lesight, Carson Rothrock, and Richard Thiel. Trumpet John Kozy, Charles Springman, and Carl Keim. Trombone John Bezek, John Croft, and Joan Grandinetti. Bass Francis Taylor, John Jodon, Janet Grayshon and George Fischer. Percussion Stanley Michal ski) John Redmond, Gary Young, and Kenneth Kuhn. 29 Are Chosen For Chorus Twenty nine women have been named to the Women’s Chorus, Raymond H. Brown, assistant professor of music, has An nounced. Members of the group are: Bar bara Wit.tenberg, Constance Jones, Linda Quinn, Mariana Mol dovan, Patricia Downes, Roberta Lerch, Adrienne Bogar, Eleanor Barnes, Annette Thas, Margaret Fisher, Nancy Siftar, Barbara Butler, Judy Berman, Patripia Fleck, Constance Buechner, Carole Bechtel. Sondra Peters, Anne Nitrauer, Reva Heller, Joan Heilman, Joan Reuben, Margy Williammee, Friederika Witte, Grace Antes, Annette Saur i n o, Marguerite Neilspn, Mary Ann Resko, Diane Kemp, and Patricia Cullen. This designation was chosen “partly in a feeling that - the farmers might be prejudiced ..against the word ‘college’ as that of a place where boys contracted idle habits.” Finally on May 6, 1862, the Board of Trustees, made formal application to the Centre County CQurt, which approved the change of name to The Agricul tural College of Pennsylvania. Promoted 1862 Act One of the principal motives behind the trustees’ action was th?ir desire for the school* to share in the benefits of-the Mor rill Land Grant Act- of 1862, which they .had been actively promoting, This Act allocated revenues from public . lands to “colleges” teaching the agricul tural and mechanic arts. By making their institution a college in name as well as fact, the trustees hoped it might more easily be designated the land grant institution of the Common wealth. FMA Begins Quality Control Program The Fraternity Marketing Association, co-operative buying as sociation for fraternities, has initiated a quality control program in an effort to increase the quality of food it buys for member fra- ternities. The quality program was started during the summer, Robert Krakoff, FMA board of trustee member, said yesterday. During the summer, Krakoff said, letters were sent to five wholesale houses asking for sam ples of their product. All com panies responded, sending pro ducts such as peas, carrots, etc. The products were then tested by a committee according to United States government test ing standards. Peas, Syrup Tested Such things as the number of peas in a can, the amount, weight, and quality of syrup in a can, were tested by the committee. The tests of each product were then compared, and results sent to each vendor who sent in pro ducts to be tested. The results pointed out how certain products compared with others. Heading the testing committee was Harold W. Perkins, assistant dean of men and advisor to FMA Others in the group were Louise Derbeque, Sigma Nu cook; Brownie Biales, housemother and food buyer for Delta Chi; John Seastone, student member of the FMA board of trustees, and Marion Kiester, secretary to FMA. Program Just a Start Krakoff said FMA hoped the quality control program would be the start of a program to give fraternities more and better food stuffs at low cost - FMA acts as a buying agent for all fraternity members. Fra ternities, after being accepted to FMA membership, must pay a $lOO deposit to FMA. This deposit serves as a checking account for the fraternity. Fraternity buys are charged against the deposit. At the end of each month, mem ber fraternities are required to replenish their balance until it reaches the $lOO mark. FMA Requirements FMA membership requires- a pledge from the member that it must buy at least 100 per cent of its canned goods or 100 per cent of its meat buys from the group. At least three dealers are approved in .each category so that fraternities have a choice of dealers. Fraternities- make their orders through FMA, which has the meat or canned good delivered direct ly to the house. At the end of each month, bills are sent to the member fraternities. Bills are paid-to FMA, which in turn pays the dealers. FMA has been in operation four years, during which its an nual -gross business has grown from $16,000 to $136,500. Chaplain's Offices The offices of the Rev. Luther H. Harshbarger, University Chap lain and co-ordinator of religious affairs, have been- moved from Waring Hall to Room 303, Old Main. Misnomers But the change in name to the Agricultural College still was not an adequate description, for the school’s program also included instruction in the mechanic arts and sciences. Indeed, of the first 90 alumni, only 12 turned to farming. Alter Name Again Accordingly, in September, 187.3, the trustees decided to ap ply to the Centre County Court once again for permission to alter the. name to the Pennsylvania State. College. Approval of the change came in January, 1874. Penn State continued to grow, and the conviction was oft-ex pressed that the College in size, scope and functions now was a university. This sentiment devel oped into a strong enough move ment that on November 13, 1953, the Centre County Court con sented to a third name change. And today, as the Pennsylva nia State University, the school at long last has a name which fits its functions. T PAGE FIVE Debate Debaters Schedule 8 Meetings Persons interested in trying out for men’s and women’s debate may attend the preliminary meet ings today. Undergradutes with a 2.0 All- University average (under the new grading system) are eligible to try out for the teams. The Women’s Debate Team will hold an introductory coke date from 3:15 to 5:15 p.m. in Ather ton Lounge at which time women interested in debate may talk with old members. An introductory meeting for freshman women will be held at 7 tonight in 2 Sparks, and an in troductory meeting for upperclcss women at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 2 Sparks. The Men's Debate Team will meet at 7 tonight in 316 Sparks. There will be no tryouts at the meeting and no formal prepara tion will be needed. Brooks Quimbly, chairman of the department of speech at Bates College, will address both teams at 8 tonight in 316 Sparks. Tryouts for men debaters will be at 7 p.m. Oct. 5, in 316 Sparks. At that time, five-minute speech es on either the affirmative or negative sides of the national de bate topic are required. Tryouts for freshmen women will be at 7 p.m. Oct. 5 in 2 Sparks, and tryouts for upDer class women at 7 p.m., Oct. 6, in 2 Sparks. John Brillhart, graduate assis tant in speech, and newly aD pointed assistant debate coach, will judge the men’s debate en tries along with J. F. O’Brien, professor of public speaking and coach. Women debaters will be judged by members of the team and the Women’s Debate Coach, C. H. Schug, associate professor of pub lic speaking. Showcases Added To Sparks Lobby Two glass showcases have been added to the lobby of the Sparks Building and will be used for Liberal Arts displays. One of the 'cases will contain an. archaeological exhibition by Dr. Frederick R. Matson, profes sor of archaeology. The other one will be used for miscellaneous lib eral arts displays, such as books written by faculty members. However, the showcases will remain empty until locks are ob tained for them. girls! "MR. JACK" formerly of Philadelphia's Gary - Elliot Salons is • now at... DsIBBS Beauty Salon my 2 S. Allen Above Kalins AD 7-7793
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers