WEDNESDAY. MARCH 12. 1958 BusAd Faculty OK's Format a Flop, | Trial Honor System J Men's Magazine j The faculty of the College of Business Administration vesterday overwhelmingly approved in principle a plan to 1° C °P>' that of another magazine institute an honor system in some of the college’s classes. issue_ “ Mug s et ”— The fundamentals of an honor system were given to the' ,“ The Foolis h Gentlemen” will faculty for their consideration by the committee on academic 1 girls of the month. Kendall Wins Eng Council Presidency Alton Kendall, junior in engi neering science from Reading, was elected president of the Engi neering and Architecture Student Council last night over Juri Niil er, junior in science from Fombell and present council recording secretary. Robert Parsky, junior in archi tecture from Philipsburg, took the position of vice president over Walter Scott, junior in electrical ensineerins; from Harrisburg. Two offices were uncontested. The post of treasurer went to Je rome Karp, sophomore in indus trial eneinering from Rochester. K.Y. Monte Montgomery, junior in industrial engineering from Kane was elected recording sec retary unopposed. Corresponding secretary is Ted McLaughlin, iunior in industrial engineering who won over fresh man Kim Packard. An amendment to the constitu tion was approved providing for eight members-at-large from the freshman class instead of one rep resentative from each curriculum. The change will be necessary next year when a department curriculum change which desig nates all freshmen as simply engi neering majors, goes into effect. Freshmen in architecture and architectural engineering will still have one general representative. The council voted to hold soDh omore elections in the fall along with freshman elections so that one soohomore can be elected from each enginering curriculum. Abba Polangin, sophomore in architectural engineering from Sharon, was appointed head of a committee to investigate the pos sible hazardous condition ot the moveab’e 1 ieachers in Recreation Hall. U. of Wisconsin Lauds O'Brien The Department of Speech at the Lmversity of Wisconsin has passed a resolution eulogizing Jo seph F. O Brien, professor of pub hc speaking .here at the Univer sitv until his death on Feb 14 , The resolution stated that he ong served with distinction his university and his profession. He £ as a p !'! me m °ver in establish- I”? me University as a center of scholarship in speech. Over a per iod of many years his writings Mve appeared in virtually every publication of the Speech Associa tion o, America and there is hbrary in the United btates ihat does not include his name m its card catalogue. . ■ , a j' also, was his impact on fr Ll Ude v nt3 and on his many inn 11 — rern ember him as an inquiring, 'energetic, and witty ‘‘tan. honesty of the Business Admin-! A special travel article on! istration Student Council The ;Bellefonte (of special interest to. committee's report was based HallS “ 6Urb '| the findings and suggestions of; Froth salesmen, easily recog-, the Subcommittee on Academic!nized by their beady eyes and! Honesty of the Senate Committee' manicured fingernails, will be! on Student Affairs. | purveying their wares all over; n M ,;j u „ - . .icampus today to the disgust of; to* £ ct£!TaidT‘S lhe intellectual dement. lieved the honor system will “get, . further if we are very specific and tackle individual courses;FCll 6ST |D with the initiative force being the faculty instructors and the de-k I | ■■ par McKt, h .; ad i.....b. Named For student council's present com- . _ millee could act in a pro-formal ' O I f / committee way until a basis for tT J an honor system has been 1 • , work ed ° u t. The orchestra has been named! Rules for the system will have for the Thespian production of! to be based on the Senate com- ‘-The Pajama Game” March 20. u s recommendations as.2l and 22 in Schwab Auditorium.! and P Dec 5 1957 ° n N ° V ‘ '« Members of the orchestra are-! The ‘subcommittee's report 3 X* provides the following before : Ber “ d °’ 1 a " d , Sarah cello.; the plan may go into effect: aa ertzo^: clarinets and ... ,!sax. Todd Coward. Uaveme Mil ,' T „ he , pla !; receive the approval i er and Lester Stauffer; flute, of the faculty in the department!Bonnie Walters; bassoon, Joseph in which the course is offered. iDevivo; bass. Fred i.Tvers: trom • The department head for the; bones, Eugene Margerum and course approve the plan. jSamuri Parsons: trumoets. Nor • Eighty-five per cent of the'man Brenemen. Lvnn Kiehl and students in the course to be con-'Harold Stasch; Diano, Judith ducted under the honor code givejTho'moson: oercussion, tvmpani. their written approval of the Kolb; drums, Kenneth tern. .Knhn. • The plan receive the approval' Th “ entire production is under of the dean of the college in which J"? direction of Stuart Kahan. the course is offered. ;The stage manager is Thomas • mho TTni.rnrcit,. „„ l Fitzpatrick and the set design and pr.*v£he U pli V „ l> P '.S nlca ' adviser * Ge “« e Ca ' The subcommittee s report ■ The play was adapted from the provides for the separate—proc-v book by George Abbott and Rich iored—testing of those students , ar( j Bissell. The music and lyrics who do not wish to participate were written by Richard Adler in the honor system. .and Jerry Ross. There are two The plan as McKinley sees it acts and 18 scenes in the play will have to start at the individual.and over 16 musical numbers and course level and slowly spread to 1 two large dances are included in cover the department. Eventual'those two acts. Also included is acceptance by the entire upper-[the “Steam Heat” dance, class segment of the college is the! Tickets will go on sale Monday ultimate aim. iat the Hetzel Union desk. Sing Clinic Planned Tonight For IFC-Panhe! Songleaders A songleaders’ clinic will be held tonight for the 21 fra ternities and 14 sororities entered in the IFC-Panhel Sing to be held during Greek Week. The clinic is open to songleaders and one other represen-j tative from each group. [ ; j The fraternity clinic will be : techniques to the songleaders ! held from 8 to 8:45 p.m. in 200: and to correct common chorus ! Carnegie and will be lead by} staging pitfalls. Frank Gullo, director of the Men’s The required songs “When Glee Club. Dr. W. Paul Campbell, Good Men Sing” for fraternities 1 director of the Women’s Chorus j and .. Evening ReV erie" for soror will conduct the sorority clinic,... ... , ** from 8:45 to 9:30 p.m. in the Het- ‘ties—-will be sung at the clinics zel Union assembly hall. jand hints on directing will be The sing preliminaries will i given, Gullo said. be held April 14 and 15 in j Schwab Auditorium. _ IMS Prof Will Speak Theta Xi is a new entry in the; _ . . sing. Nancy Siftar, sing co-chair-; J- «• Comer, associate professor man, said that if groups still wish of mineral sciences, will speak at to enter, the committee will try* metallurgy seminar on 'The to obtain more music. jElectron Microscope as a Tool for Gullo said the clinics are Studying surfaces at 4:10 p.m. being held to give direction [today in 317 WiUard. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA O'Casey Likes Best 'Lincoln and Theatre “Abraham Lincoln and the theatre"—a tour of Washing ton, D.C. and New York City—were the high spots of a trek across the United States according to Shivaun O’Casey who made her first tour of America as a member of the Dublin Plavers. Miss O’Casey, 18-year-old daughter of playwright Sean O'Casey, said she was a little non plussed by the whole thing, the tour had gone so fast. Her father, who wrote “Juno and the Pay cock”—the play presented by the Dublin Players at Schwab Audi torium Saturday—and her moth er, actress Eileen Casey, thought it was a good idea for her to make the tour. They felt it was a “good chance to see a great country.” Miss O'Casey served as assis tant stage manager to the Dub lin Players and also played a small role in the play, She said she does not con sider herself an actress and that her mother and father wanted her to be a doctor. While in New York City, Miss O'Casey saw several Broadway and off-Broadway productions. These included: “A Long Day's Journey into Night,” “My Fair Lady” (which she termed "a great evening”), readings from "I Knock at the Door,” ‘‘Purple Dust” and “Romanoff and Juliet.”; Miss O'Casey said she has net attended the theatre in Ireland or England very many times. She also toured New York City but what she had seen she be- and Washington, D.C., or as she lieves American musicals are puts it, “Abraham Lincoln and much more lavish in their stag- the theatre." ing than English productions. While in America Miss O'Casey Mittnnx/ I inn Inn bought and sent home to her Lion inn father hats from different parts A 4„ 1. of the country. The hats had one manager TO K6TIT6 thing in common—they were all j G h n D. Lee will retire as man bright. as her father loves them. ager of the Nittany Lion Inn> In describing the average day e£fective Julv according to of a member of the Dublin Play- ... . . . . b ers when the group is on tour. University officials. Miss O’Casey said: Previously an employee with “We get up at 8 or 9 o’clock, the Norwich Inn. Norwich. Conn., and climb into our bus. We ride Lee came to the campus in April to our next engagement, some-; 1932. The Inn was opened to the times traveling up to 19 hours a public in September 1931. day. Sometimes the bus breaks No replacement was announced. down. As a matter of fact it - finally broke down for good in v . ... . . Freemont and we came up here tt,oe TOnder Workshop by chartered bus.* 1 The Blue Yonder Workshop, "When we get to the town sponsored by Angel Flight, will we are playing in, we go to the meet at 7 tonight in 203 Willard hotel, try to avoid the bellhops to hear the chaplain from Olm and then descend on the shops :stead Air Force base discuss reli like a plague of locusts." •gious and family life in the ser- Miss O’Casey has managed find time to do some sight-seeing between traveling and perform-: ing. In Lexington, Ky., she visited Stonewall Jackson’s tomb and, other monuments dealing with 1 the famous Civil War general. Have a mm of Ml h lITA University Travel j Agency l! Shivaun O'Casey Playicright’s Daughter $585 rient \ .C. fr«" $998 ! trips to Mextc« America $69? up r Tour 5493 Up cn< World SI 398 up Travel Agent PAGE FIVE