PAGE TWO Panhel Straw Vote Favors Existing Rotation Plan Capt. Philip A. Mark of the Campus Patrol yesterday cau tioned student drivers that Uni- By LYNN WARD !versify driving regulations for- Panhellenic Council voted 19-1 in a straw vote Tuesday bidding operating students to op , rate cars on campus between night in favor of retaining the present rotation system for 7 : 30 a.m. an d 5:30 p.m. on class days will remain in effect until the semester ends, Jan. 22. Mark also cautioned student drivers to keep parking stickers issued in the fall semester for the spring semester. Parking tickets issued by the Campus Patrol in the fall semes ter will carry over to the spring ,semester, he said. A student get ting two tickets in the fall and one in the spring will be liable to a $5 fine is would be the case if the student got all three fines the same semester, according to Mark. the election of the council's presidents. If the amendments to the Panhel election system as pre-: sented to the council Tuesday night are finally passed, the' major change in the system will provide for the election of' the president by all sorority wo-1 men instead of election just by the sorority in line for presidency. Chose Sophomore The present constitution callsl for the sorority which is to be!, represented in the office of presi dent by the rotation system to elect a girl at the end of her: sophomore year to be vice presi dent her her junior year and presi dent her senior year. Under the proposed amend ment, a number of coeds from that sorority will go before a screening board to apply for the office of vice president. The screening board will choose three coeds from the applicants to run lin a general election of all pan :hellenic women. Ed Council Elects Junior To Office Myrna Paynter, junior in edu cation from West Chester, was elected president of the Educa tion Student Council Tuesday night. Ruth Johnson, sophomore in education from Mount Jewett. was elected vice president and Sandra Reimer, sophomore in ed ucation from New Cumberland, was elected secretary-treasurer. The new officers trill officially take office after other student councils have held their elections. Joyce Fullerton, junior in edu cation from Wayne, gave a report on her council-sponsored trip to the United Nations. Miss Fullerton talked on the General Assembly sessions that she viewed and on the discussions concerning the Suez crisis and Hungary. Miss Fullerton passed out ma terial that she had obtained at the UN and said that the Rus sians were very friendly and also gave her material. Miss Poynter announced that the council would hold a coffee' hour from 4 to 5 p.m. tomorrow. Janet Davidson, junior in edu cation from Kennett Square, was named editor of Moniter, the edu cation bulletin. Council elections were held earlier than usual because Judith Hance, outgoing president, will be student-teaching next semes ter and Katherine Dickson, vice president, will not return to the University next semester. Debaters to Attend Bucknell Tourney Four members of the Men's De bate Team will attend the Buck nell Good Will Tournament this weekend to debate the national topic: Resolved: "That the United States should discontinue direct economic foreign aid." Debating affirmatively will be Herbert Cohen, sophomore in psychology from Scranton, and Robert Neff. junior in zoology and entomology from Pottstown. Keith Otterbein, junior in arts and letters from Warren. and Ed ward Fegert, senior in arts and Jeffers from Milwaukee. Wis., will be on the negative side. Group fo Present Heywood Farce "John, Tyb, and Sir John," a play by John Heywood, will be presented at 7:30 tonight in the Little Theatre in Old Main. The pre-Shakespearian farce is being given by graduate students in theatre arts as a theme project for English Literature 480. The students are George Cavey, from Springfield, director; Rich ard Higgins. Pebble Beach. Calif., set designer; and Delmer Hen dricks, Reasnor, lowa, costume designer. Coeds to Be Rated On Cage Ability Basketball ratings for all coeds who were not rated during intra mural games the week of Dec. 17 and who want to be rated for the Women's Recreation Association's basketball team, will be given at 5 pm. Thursday in the White Hall gym. One team will be selected based on the highest ratings—to represent Penn State on Sports Day on Saturday, March 2. Physical Education women fac ulty members will judge and give the ratings. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Vice President First The coed chosen in the general election will serve as vice presi dent and eventually president. The second highest girl in the election totals will become assis tant vice president her junior ,year. She will serve also as chair man of the Panhel elections corn mittee and will be in line for the loffice of president if the vice president is unable tP take her of- Ifice her senior year. { Natalie Moskowitz, council .member in charge of the election system revision, explained to the council that the present rotation {system was not altered. The revi sions committee worked under Ithe assumption that Panhel !members felt that every sorority ;has a girl qualified for the office, lof president. If this is not ac cepted, Miss Moskowitz said, the ;sorority system is defeated. To Insert Clause According to Barbara Nicholls, !Panhel president, a clause will be (inserted in the constitution en abling a sorority whose members feel they do not have a qualified girl for the office.to pass up their opportunity for president. In this ease, the presidency would go to ;the next sorority in the rotation :system. At present there is an under- Istanding concerning this in Pan hel Council, but the constitution contains no provision for it. The election revisions also pro vide for a general election by all sorority women to fill the offices Id recording secretary, corres ponding secretary and treasurer. (Continued on page three) Vassady to Speak At Chapel Today Dr. Bela Vassady, distinguished theologian and guest lecturer in American theological Seminaries, will present a short meditation at the regular Thursday after noon vesper service at 4:30 to day in the Helen Eakin Eisen hower Meditation Chapel. He will speak about the Chris tian revival and historic revival of faith witnesses in Hungary among students after World War II and the Communist occupation. The Meditation Chapel Choir will offer the anthem. Hall Mc- Mannis and the Rev. Hal Leiper will conduct the service. Scrolls Will Sell Cookies to Coeds Scrolls, senior w)men's hat so ciety, will sell cookies during the final examination period in all women's dormitories. The sale will begin at 8:30 pin. Monday in the dormitory recrea tion rooms. Cookies will be sold until 10:30 each night. Three varieties of cookies at prices ranging from 30 to 50 cents a box will be sold. The profit made from the sale will be added to the Mary Jane Wyland Scholarship Fund, spon sored by Scrolls. FOR GOOD RESULTS USE COLLEGUUN CLASS Mark Cautions Campus Drivers The class of 1960 at the U. S. Naval Academy in Annapolis will include 273 enlisted men. HERE ARE THE CORRECT ANSWERS TO THE OLD GOLD PUZZLES '• :.••• ' 14 : A A , .• ••• • Check the record of your answers against these, to see if you are automatically eligible to compete in the tie-breakers. 1. Smith 2. Purdwo 3. Tula's. 4. Beloit 5. Rollins 6. Rutgors Enough entries have been checked to show that many players have correctly solved all 24 puzzles, thereby creating a tie for all prizes. If the record of your answers to the first 24 puzzles, mailed on or before December 19, conforms with the correct answers published herein, you are automatically eligible to compete in the tie-breaking puzzles. The series of tie-breakers will be published in this paper, commencing on or about February Ist. Watch for the tie-breakersl Please note Rule 2 as published in the official Tangle School rules at the beginning of the contest ... which reads as follows: • Ride 2(b) In case more than one person solves correctly the same number of puzzles, the prize tied for and as many subsequent prizes as there are pram tied, will be reserved and thou so tying will be required to are a set of tie-breaking puzzles, to determine the order in which the reserved prizes will be awarded. YOU'LL GO FOR OLD GOLDS Today's Old Golds are an exclusive blend of fine, nature-ripened tobaccos ; : ... so rich .. . so light .. . so golden bright. That's why Old Gold Regulars and King Size...without a filter ...TASTE GREAT STRAIGHT. For the same reason, OLD GOLD FILTERS give you THE Blair TASTE YET IN A FILTER CIGARETTE. • I 1- 0 16 GAO 016 Gelb CICAIETTES .~.;. mo o" .~.~ FILTER KINGS NO OTHER CIGARETTE CAN MATCH THE TASTE OF TODAY'S OLD GOLDS Workmen Complete Project On Electric Power Supply Workmen have completed' a project to raise the power :supplied to Sparks and Bur-, roves buildings and Carnegie Hall from 25,000 to 300,000 watts. This was done by the instal lation of three 100,000 watt trans formers in the power unit situ jated under the sidewalk' east of 'Sparks. The three transformers taken from Osmond Laboratory will re place three 50,000 and three 25,- 000 watt transformers which oper ated as a unit to supply power to the three buildings. Five circuit breakers and a primary switch were also in stalled in the power unit. Robert W. Knouse, project engineer in the utilities division of the De partment of Physical Plant, said the power step-up will eliminate power failures similar to those loccurring in the three buildings r I. V) 13. Stephens 14. Princeton 15. Dartmouth 16. Wellesley 17: Notre Dame Oberrm Harvard Colgate . Stanford 10. 11. 12. Bryn Mawr 18. Vanderbilt Grinnell eta TTTTT Elt KING SIZE IZ2I==!!!MMEMI THURSDAY. JANUARY 10, 1957 earlier in the fall. Three new 250,000 watt trans formers have replaced the three transformers taken from Osmond. The transformers will also sup ply power for the Hall of the Americas Building under con struction east of Osmond. An ad ditional circuit breaker was also installed. - In other construction work, Charles A. Lamm, head of the division of building maintenance and operation of the Department of Physical Plant, said workmen have completed a metal roof on the coal bin for the Nittany Pow er Plant. The roof will prevent rain and snow from freezing on the coal. Workmen are also busy in four buildings on campus. Rooms 211 Armsby Hall, 111 Electrical En gineering and 302 Old Main will be subdivided by partitions. 19. Georgetown 20. Middlebury 21. Johns Hopkins 22. Brigham Young 23. Western Reserve 24. Northwestern 0160016 1 CICARETTES tjpgr.3? ... ..11 ' 41' REGULAR SIZI E amide* ifs., serif s. Nausea . -.., ---, ' " 7:',...7fr.f:':','. Li --"--,,,i• -,...,.,,,,•:-', '7,,"2..........., ...,, t , , -.- . 4'V., ,-,-- A:74e'; 4.-t-,5:,,,,,,, Z : •':: `,.'`,5"....4 Itlil/4"..1tVf.'A:41-4;4'4".. ~A, ~.`,..4,‘,q . `,..t.:,',. ''.. '-''- --- - - .. - ~ .., . .."Y: ---' . -.-. . . -"I i •"... Get a pack ... Or 0 carton and see if you don'tagres...'