PAGE TWO Two Nittany Given Office Two freshmen from the Nittany area will be placed on office probation and given judicial warning, the dean of men’s office reported yesterday. The students received probation for causing a disturbance in the Nittany dining hall last week. The decision was handed down Tuesday night by the Association of Independent Men’s Judicial Board at Review and was approved yesterday by the dean of men’s office. Tuesday night's closed bearing session, was the second in the case, which was first heard last week. The case was deferred byi the board because the counselor; involved in the case was not pre sent to give his version of the case. Pollock Council Will Sponsor Yule Contest Pollock Council -will sponsor a dormitory Christmas decoration contest and will award three pric es totaling $9O. Robert Waltemeyer, Council president, said the contest will in clude judging inside and outside decorations at the discretion of the individual dormitories. He explained that a dormitory may decorate both inside and out side but must inform the. judging committee which decoration they desire to be considered. First prize is $29; second prize, $l5, and third prize $lO. Waltemeyer said a judging committee and judging date will be announced later. Council also appointed projects committee to investigate the pos sibilities of: 1 1. Painting the wooden posts on the edge of Pollock Road in front of Nittany 20 so they may be seen at night. 2. Repairing holes in the road between Pollock 9 and the Sunoco Service Station. 3. Installing a light of some sort between Pollock 2 and Pollock Road. 2 Teams Keep Bowling Leads Although Dorm 14 was idle, it still managed to keep its Lea gue A lead in the Intramural in dependent bowling league Mon day night. In the other inde pendent circuit, the Dark Horses maintained its first place position over idle Newman Club. Three forfeits marked the Lea gue A matches: the Engineers stopped Unit Six, 4-0; Dorm 23 won over the Nittany Ten Pins, 4-0; and the Alley Cats beat the Centovards, 4-0. In other games Watts Rollers copped a 3-1 win from Pollock 2, and the Mogam bos dropped the Weather Men, 4-0. The Dark Horses’ shutout win over Frazier Dorm boosted their lead over Newman Club to four games. Three other shutout vic tories were recorded in League B. The Erieites blanked the No Threats, 4-0; the Pin Splitters whitewashed the Flying Dutch men, 4-0; and the East Five stop ped the Screwbowlers, 4-0. In the other match, R.A.R. beat P.S.U., 3-1. Soph Advisory Board Today is the last day sopho mores may sign up at the Hetzel Union desk for the sophomore ad visory board, William Co ale, sophomore class president, said. After 100 years, Penn State's alumni number 55,000, but there will be 100,000 throughout the world by WTO. ] THE SURE SIGN OF A CAR THAT’S RIGHT AMD READY TO ROLL. When you drive on snowy highways (and we’re due for it), the surest protection for TIME. MONEY, and LONG EVITY is a reliable set of snow tires. Stop in today—he safe tomorrow 1 BATHURST GOLF SERVICE Open 24 Honrs THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Freshmen Probation At first the students main tained that they caused only a minor disturbance involving the pushing back and forth of chain in the dining hall. Hastila Attitude They said that they adopted a hostile attitude toward the coun selor because of the way he ap proached them in questioning their actions. In the students* opinion, the counselor used no tact in asking than for identification and did not identify himself as a representative of the dean of men's office. The board decided that since there was a difference of opinion between students and the coun selor in the case, they should de fer a decision on the case until all sides of the story were heard. Closed Hearing At Tuesday night’s closed ses sion, the board heard the coun selor’s story, the students’ version and an account of the happening from another student who ob served the event. Harold Perkins, assistant dean of men, explained the board’s un usual procedure of hearing the case in closed session by pointing out that it was a case of judg ment of the word of the counselor against the. word of the student. Perkins said the students were at fault in creating the distur (Continued on page eight) FMtam 2:M. S :W, 5:4», 7:41, »:17 Robert Jan Mil chum Sterling "Man With the Gun" Sat., Dec. 10 ADMISSION FREE Seely to Ask 7 Appointments To Committee All-University President Earl Seely said Wednesday he will seek the appointment of seven students to the Cabinet Commit tee on Cultural Aspects. They ate Judith Pendleton, Leonides president; Aamold Hoff man, senior in journalism from Philadelphia; Jon Plaut, men’s debate team captain; Stanley Lindenberg, junior in business administration from Pittsburgh; Ann Jones, junior in secondary education from Scranton; Karl Kirk, sophomore in aeronautical engineering from Shelbyville, Ind.; and Georgia Cohen, sopho more in arts and letters from Mel rose Park. The appointments, which were recommended by Cabinet Person nel Interviewing Committee, must be approved by Cabinet. The next official meeting of Cabinet will be at 7 pa. Nov. 15. Dickerson Given 4-H Recognition Dr. Russell B. Dickerson, asso ciate dean of the College of Agri culture, was named one of eight winners of National 4-H Alumni Recognition awards last week. A gold key award was present ed to Dickerson at the 34th an nual National 4-H Congress held in Chicago. The recognition award is given “to encourage former 4-H Club members to continue their, inter est in the extension program, and to provide youth with living ex amples of dependable, purposeful citizenship.” f] WARWEB - ] Hot Hunk of Film! "The BIG KNIFE" Jack Palance - Ida Lupino Wendell Corny - Rod Steiger Shelley Winters Walt Disney's "AFRICAN LION" Plus - Walt Disney's "PETER AND THE WOLF" Pollock Council presents Two Run Richard "Doc” Dougherty, a fifth semester industrial management major from Syracuse, N.Y., decided there were too piany open spaces in his schedule when he registered last Fall. So he opened a service station “to fill in the extra time.’* This "spare time” plus a genuine love for mechanical work and a need for “a few extra bucks to keep the wives happy” were the ingredients from which was born the “Student Service Station,” located simply, “by the duck pond.” Originally the project of four students, two of whom dropped out of school soon after work began, the student-operated serv ice center is now run exclusively by Dougherty and Nick Spang ler, formerly a fourth semester metallurgy major who was forced to drop out of school this semes ter because of an operation. Schedule Divided Dougherty, who only has class es scheduled Mondays, Wednes days. and Fridays, works from opening to closing, 7:30 am. to 7 pm. each Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. Spangler works from 7:30 am. to S pm. each Mon day, Wednesday and Friday, at which time he is relieved by Dougherty, who works till 7. However, this schedule is not followed exclusively. “Many times we both work to gether when its possible, and we adjust the schedule according to how much class work ‘Doc’ has,” Spangler said. Opening the station was Dough erty's idea, Spangler said. Dough erty also supplied the capital by means of a personal loan and 9-12 P.M. Music by HOWARD BINK & Orchestra Informal Student Vets Service Station By AL KLIMCKE A portrait ... by KEPLER is fit for a Queen She Studio Located in Danks & Co. Beaver Are. Entrance AD S-49SS V ' HUB Ballroom EVERYBODY WELCOME FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9. 1955 some of his own funds. After three weeks of prepara tion the Student Service Station was officially opened Nov. S. Since that time expenses have broken down roughly to |UO per month for rent, gas and an inven tory of stock, ami "a tremendous overhead -for Uttle things like tools and signs” according to Spangler. “It took only about $5OO. to begin the business,** Spangler said, “but the biggest expense is keeping it going.” Spangler estimated it would take about three months to catch up with expenses. “Then we’ll really begin mak ing money," he said. Both Spangler and Dougherty are married and are veterans. Fanner Station Attendant Dougherty formerly worked as a service station attendant In Syracuse, and hr Texas, where he served part of his four years in the Air Force. The service station remains open during vacations and the summer months, since both men now make their homes in State College and attend summer ses sions. Both Dougherty and Spangler intend to . run the station until they graduate, at which time they expect to turn its operation over to other students.
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