FRIDAY. MARCH 15. 1957 3 Student Dickinson The Women's Studen , three women to Dickins. Biddle House, the honor The purpose of the t of setting up an honor h Janet Davidson, cha 18 Receive Tickets F Violations Eighteen students received ets from State College Poli. traffic violations during the iod Feb. 11 to 28. Peter Magaro, sophomor, psychology from Hazleton arrested for reckless driving, Five were arrested for .51 ing. They were John Bur junior in psychology from College; Roger Rue, 10th sem architecture major from Shef field; Francis McGurgan, j i mior in hotel administration !from Pittsburgh; Joseph Sitkin, sopho more in arts and letters from Lewistown; and Joseph Sevelan, sophomore, in electrical engineer ing from Mahanoy City. Eight students were fined for driving too fast for conditions. They include Edward Onstead, junior in aeronautical engineer ing from Berlin; Donald Mc- Creary, freshman in business ad ministration from Selinsgrove; Edward Bryan, senior in dairy science from State College; and John Beresford, junior in eco nomics from Philipsburg. Jay Tolson, senior in business administration from Merio n; Charles Springman, junior in Di vision of Intermediate Registra tion from. Lancaster; Max Perl mutter, sophomore in business administration from Maplewood, N.J.; and Frank Munz, junior in Division of Intermediate Registra tion from Lakewood, Ohio. Four were arrested for failing to stop at a stop sign. They were Edward Rosenblum, sophomore in arts and letters from Sunbury; Martin Kravit, sophomore in arts and letters from New Brunswick, N.J.; Norman Schue, senior in dairy science from Hanover; and John Allen Jr., sophomore in psy chology from Wilmington, Del. 7 Running for 3 HEc. Offices Leslie Shultz, junior from State College, and Patricia Moran, junior from Broomall, have been nominated for pres ident of the Home Economics Student Council. Nominated for vice president are David Allison, sophomore from Pittsburgh; Eleanor Judy, sophomore from Cochranville, and Suzanne Aiken, junior from Edge wood. Candidates for secretary-t i i user are Suzanne Keener, man from Greensburg, and bara Bixier, sophomore f Dawson. Nominations for these o will remain open until the tions Tuesday. To Hold Self-Nomination The council this week vot: Service and Saks • Radios •Car Radios •Phonographs •TV Sets State College 232 S. Allen St. Will Observe Honor House AT EARLEY 1 Government Association will send n College next weekend to live in 1 ouse of the college. 1 ip is to investigate the possibility , use on campus. . rman of WSGA implementations committee, another member of the committee, and a reporter of The Daily Collegian will leave campus Friday morning and will return Sunday evening. The women will learn how the honor house was instituted at Dickinson College and they will see for themselves how the house is run. Will Talk io Students They will talk with both men' and women students to find the general opinion of the student body toward the honor house. tick e for per- - . Victoria Hann, dean of women at Dickinson College, has volun teered to talk with the women and to give them any information they might need for their report. The president of Biddle House will take the women on a tour of the house explaining the system. No other plans have been made, because the women want to live there as if they were students of the college living a normal week end. ii eed ows, . tate tester Honor Code Used Biddle House is a residence hall housing 32 senior women. The wo men who, live there sign a pledge saying that they will obey the rules of the college. The girls are on their honor to obey the rules. There is no housemother living in Biddle Hcuse. The women enforce the rules themselves. The idea of an honor system was re-introduced last week to the Senate by Marilyn Seltzer, former chairman of the imple mentations committee. She gave a full report on the findings of the committee. The committee had talked with members of the psy chology department to obtain fur ther information for the report. Club Schedules Bridge Matches The Bridge Club will hold pairs championship matches March 25 and April 1, in the Hetzel Union cardroom. A contestant must play with the same partner in both sessions to place in the overall competition. However, each weekly session will have its winners. The club will hold its weekly meeting from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Monday in the HUB cardroom. The meeting is open to all bridge players. Winners receive fraction al master point certificates. hold self-nominations for repre sentatives to council Saturday through Monday before the elec tions on April 2 and 3. This is the same procedure that has been used other years. Plans were discussed for a mix er to be held with the members of the Business Administration Student Council. The suggestion was made that a talk on criminol ogy be given at this mixer, rather than the previously suggested talk by a representative of a book agency. Permission was given the chair man of the mixer committee to ar range the details with the chair man from the Business Adminis tration Council. eas- I esh- Bar , o m Display Plan Dropped It was announced that the bul letin board display the council had agreed to supply had not been put up due to some confusion in Vote Lion Vote Action THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Approved Fraternities The following fraternities have been approved for the entertain ment of women guests Friday and Saturday nights: Acacia. Alpha Chi Rho. Alpha Chi Sig ma, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Alpha Camma Rho. Alpha Phi Delta. Alpha Rho Chi. Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Zeta. Bearer House, Beta Sigma Rho, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Delta Chi. Delta Sigma Phi. Delta -Tau Delta. Delta Theta Sigma. Delta , Upsilon. Kappa Alpha Psi. Kappa Delta Rho. Lambda Chi Alpha. Phi Delta "Theta. Phi Epsilon Pi. Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa. Phi Kappa Psi. Phi Kappa Sigma. Phi Kappa Tau. Phi Mu Delta, Phi Sigma Delta. Phi Sigma Kappa. Pi Kappa Alpha. Pi Kappa Phi. Pi Sigma Upsilon. Sigma Chi. &ChM! Nu, Sigma Phi Alpha, Sigma Phi Epsilon- Sigma Pi. Tau Kappa Epsilon. Tau Phi Delta, Theta Chi. Theta Delta Chi. Theta Kappa Phi, Theta Xi, Triangle and Zeta Beta Tau. Kappa Alpha Psi and Pi Sigma Up§ilon are approved for Satur day night only. AIM Board Grants $25 To Hospital The Association of Independent Men Board of Governors has al lotted $23 to the building fund of the Centre County Hospital. In bringing the motion to the floor, Tames Tipton,. Town Inde pendent Men president, said that the drive, of which President Eric A. Walker is chairman, is falling below quota. 5400.000 Needed The hospitEl needs $400,000 more in its drive to double its capacity, he said. The board decided to install the new AIM officers at the annual AIM banquet to be held on Satur day April 27. The officers, to be elected by the board on April 3, will be sworn in before the banquet, ac cording to Lash Howes, AIM pres ident. Nominations for the AIM elec tions will be held on March 27. Any independent maa with an All-University average of 2.0 or better may run. The president must have sth or 6th semester standing. A candidate may be nominated by a member of the board, or by a petition signed by 300 indepen dent men. Must Submit Letter Howes asked all prospective candidates to submit a letter to him stating the office they seek. Norman Hedding, AIM treas urer, read the names of 30 men eligible for AIM service pins. getting the plans from the chair man. The council voted to drop, the plan because of the late date. Under the report on the Spring Weekend to be held May 12 and 13, it was announced that the committees for each of the major fields in home economics had ar ranged for space for their dis plays. Since the council repre sentatives are not on the major committees, the coordinating com mittee was urged to work closely with both the council and the other committees. The council decided that it would leave a list of recommenda tions for the incoming council members. Among the suggestions for such a list were creating the office of parliamentarian an d moving the council meetings to the Hetzel Union Building in an effort to stimulate discussion. Requirements Listed 2 Artists to Present Mime, Music Show "Counterpart," a program of music and pantomime, will be presented at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Schwab Auditorium. Frans Reynders, mime, and Herman Chessid, harpsichord 'ist, will present the program under the auspices of the School of Arts. Admission is free. Mime is a kind of drama imitated and generally represent ed in a satirical manner. Reynders studied pantomime with the fore most exponent of this art in mod ern times, Etienne Decroux, teach er of Marcel Marceau and Jean Louis Barrault. Toured Abroad As a member of Decroux's troupe, he toured extensively in Europe and Great Britain and later starred in musical comedy in his native Holland. Reynders was an art teacher and scenic designer. His interest in music, particularly in the' harpsichord, led to his belief that the harpsichord and its literature would afford an ideal accompani ment for his mimes. After arriving in the United States, he met Chessid, a former pupil of the well-known harpsi chordist, Ralph Kirkpatrick. Clarified Forms Chessid's practical experience as a recording and performing artist, plus his background in composi tion, enabled him to clarify musi cal forms to Reynders so that they could be used as a basis for de veloping abstract and narrative mimes. Therefore, the music becomes "mirrored" in its human counter part—mime. Included in the program will be selections by Bach, Mozart and Sweelinck with mimes depicting "The Bird," "Game with the Hand," "The Park Bench," "Con sort with Angels," "The Tree" and "The Trials of Pierrot." Grad Pay-- (Continued from page one) The Governor was accompanied at the crowded coffee hour by President Eric A. Walker and Os sian R. MacKenzie, dean of the College of Business Administra tion. Dr. Walker was chided by several of the company for his deep tan, a result of his recent 12-day Caribbean cruise. The governor flew to the Phil ipsburg airport yesterday after noon and then upon arrival here was taken on a campus tour. He left the coffee hour at 5 p.m. to go to a banquet given by the Busi ness Administration Student Council. On his way out of the coffee hour with '")r. Walker the Gov ernor glanced at a student in Ber muda shorts standing along _the sidewalk. He commented: "IVs good weather for Ber mudas—do you have an extra pair?" MAKE YOUR COMING TO REC NALL APRIL 7 SUNDAY AFTERNOON AT 2:30 Admission: —Sponsored by— sl.so THE JAZZ CLUB n which scenes from life are Food Authority Will Discuss Eating Patterns An authority on regicnal foods, Nell B. Nichols, will talk on "Mod em Patterns of Eating Across the U.S.A." at Home Economics Spring Weekend, April 12 and 13. Mrs. Nichols is associate editor and director of food and equip ment of Farm Journal magazine. and has charge of its food and equipment operations, as well as its countryside kitchens. A former field food editor of The Woman's Home Companion and an authority on regional foods, Mrs. Nichols has visited every state and Hawaii in her search for the best foods which families prepare and eat. She is also author of "Good Home Cook ing Across the U.S.A." and "The Farm Cook and Rule Book." Mrs. Nichols received her bach elor's degree from Kansas State College and master's degree in home economics and journalism from the University of Wisconsin. "Modern Patterns for Eating Across the U.S.A." is scheduled for 1 p.m. Friday, April 12 and will be repeated at 9 a.m. on Saturday in Room 101, Hetzel Union. The meeting is open to the public. FC WEEKEND REALLY The Fabulous FOUR 51777 11 Capitol Records PAGE FIVE Stars of .