FRIDAY. OCTOB :R 24. 1958 Gree is May Not Get Valley Cabins Ston Fraternitie: able to build c: the University ; Robert La Council, broug and other student organizations may not be bins at Stone Valley due to a technicality in s lease with the U.S. government. 3ar, president of the Agriculture Student ,ht the question before last night’s All-Uni- Sharp Home to Go For onths Six M Larry Sharp v ill return to his home in Drexel Hill for a six month leave fron the Rehabili tation Center ii New York as soon as preparations have been made for his arrival. In a letter (o All-University President Jay Fddstein, Sharp’s mother diselosec the plans for Sharp s release from the hospital. Mrs. Sharp said that he will return to the center for further tests on his rehabilitation pro gress at the end of the six-month period. She also .thanked Cabinet for its concern " bver Sharp and said she would keep them in formed on his progresg. at home. Dorothy Newman presented a report on possible means to aid the Sharp family at Cabinet meeting last night and offered suggestions for seeking off-cam ip.llB aid from various organiza tions. These suggestions-were • Contacting George Reimer, executive secretary for the So ciety for Crippled Children in Harrisburg to inquire about a treatment program for outgoing patients. B • Contacting the doctors who are working with Sharp now to ask for suggestions on where to applv for financial aid. the Associated Charities in Philadelphia. . One of the proposed agencies m seeking aid, the Vocation of Rehabilitation Bureau, may not be able to help Sharp, according to Miss Newman. The agency re portedly helps only those handi capped who are employable. 'Cosmopolitans' to Hold Dance The Cosmopolitan Club will sponsor a square dance and party from 8 to 11 p.m. tomorrow in 3 White. Student Council Nominations BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION COUNCIL 120 Bouqke CHEM-PHYS COUNCILp— Osmond Bulletin Boards D.O.C. COUNCIL HUB Bulletin Board EDUC. lATION COUNCIL Dean's Office in Burrowes and HUB desk STEERING and ARCHITECTURE COUNCIL Bulletin* Boards in Engineering Building and HUB desk ENGI ECONOMICS COUNCIL Lobby of Home Ec Building hom: AL ARTS COUNCIL 132 Sparks LAL INDUSTRIES COUNCIL M.I. 1 classes MINE IICAL EDUCATION COUNCIL Phys Ed Blocks PHYS versity Cabinet meeting. Laßar quoted from the Univer sity’s original lease received in 1940 which stated the University may not sub-lease land to any or ganizations unless special per mission is granted by the federal government. Laßar said three members of President Eric A. Walker's com mittee on policy for Stone Val ley and a management commit teeman told him they thought the sub-leasing would not be feasible. Some fraternities and. other’ campus organizations had dis- j cussed locating cabins in the rec-; reation area. j The point was brought out in discussion of the Recreation and Student Welfare Workshop re port from Student Encampment. Cabinet defeated a Laßar mo tion to delete a jfflrt of the workshop report which asked that the possibility of cabins built by student organization in Stone Valley be publicized. David Fine m a n, workshop chairman, said the possibility of such cabins was mentioned in a Board of Trustee report which would indicate the cabins may still be built. Students Own Majority Of Bicycles Inspected » State College police report that over 90 per cent of the 34 bikes they inspected last weekend be longed to University students. The inspection, which was the last scheduled one in the present drive, brings the total of bicycles inspected to 1480. A.1.M.--LEONIDES Autumn Ball NOV. 1 HUB Ballroom Tickets available at HUB Desk, Nitlany 20, Waring Hall $2 per couple LAST DAY SIGN UP NOW! THE'DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Nygreen Cites Greeks' Dual Roles Fraternities present the greatest potential tool and at the s&me time the greatest threat to obtaining the ideals sought by educators, Glenn T. Nygreen said last night. “Fraternities at the present are not appealing to the best minds on a college campus,'’ Nygreen, dean of men at Kent State Uni versity and educational adviser to the National Interfraternity Conference, said at last night’s IFC banquet. The idea of conformity on the part of members who join a fraternity must be subdued, Nygreen said, es he addressed the closing session of the 3-day IFC Workshop program. Undergraduate members of the fraternities hold the key to the [expansion and growth of the na tional fraternity system, he said, jand fraternity members must an alyze themselves now and help make the fraternity ideals expli cit. Fraternities must -become a strong part of a University’s edu cational system, Nygreen said. “Fraternities are a strong hold in giving students an opportunity to find security and a sense of belonging,” Nygreen said. They also give college men an oppor- tunity to make mistakes end marks with numerous humorous build a sense of community liv- anecdotes and illustrations, mg among the entire fraternity P ,_„, system, he said. « Edward Hmla. IFC president. On the Penn Stale campus. P resented ihe Si 9 ma Chi * cho1 ’ the IFC is the strongest tool arship improvement trophy to with which to maximize ihe fraternities* usefulness as part of the education system. Ny green said. He said the national fraternity system must look for danger spots if they are to avoid destruction. The educational values of college fraternities are numerous and must be exploited, he said. Nygreen supplemented his re- THE DRESS PARADE in all my years of observing coed fashions—and I have been arrested many times—l have never seen such verve, such dash, such Je ne sais quoi as can be found in this year’s styles! I am particularly enchanted by the new "baby waist” dresses which so many of you girls are favoring this season. How demure you all look in your "baby waists” 1 How sweet I How innocent! How colorful when your housemother lifts you up and burps you after dinner! Another trend that leaves me limp with rapture is the over sized handbag. Goodbye to dinky little purses that hold nothing at all! Hurrah for today’s sensibly sized hag with plenty of room for your makeup, your pens and pencils, your shelter half, your Slinky toy, your MG, and your Marlboroa. Did I say Marl boros? Certainly I said Marlboros. What girl can consider herself in the van, in the swim, and in the know, if she duLo.i't smoke Marlboros? What man, for that matter. Do you want a filter that is truly new, genuinely advanced, but at the same time, does not rob you of the full flavor of first-rate tobacco? Then get Marlboro. Also get matches because the pleasure you derive from a Marlboro is necessarily limited if unlit. To return to coed fashions, let us now discuss footwear. The popular flat shoe was introduced several years ago when it became obvious that girls were growing tallei than boys. For a while the flat shoes kept the sexes in a state of uneasy balance, but today they will no longer serve. Now, even in flats, girls are towering over their dates, for the feminine growth rate lias continued to rise with disturbing speed. In fact, it is now thought possible that we will sec fifteen-foot girls in our lifetime. But science is working on the problem, and I feel sure American know-how will find an answer. Meanwhile, a tem porary measure is available—the reverse wedgie. The reverse wedgie is simply a wedgie turned around. This tilts a girl backward at a 45 degree angle and cuts as much as three feet off her height. It is, of coursej impossible to walk in this position unless you have support, so your date will have to keep his arm around your waist at all times. This will tire him out in fairly short order; therefore you must constantly give him encouragement. Keep looking up at him and batting your lashes and repeating in awed tones, "How strong you are, Shorty!” Next we turn to hair styling. The hair-do this year is definitely the cloche-coif. One sees very few crew cuts orjrene Castle bobs, and the new Mohican cut seems not to have caught on at all. In fact, I saw only one girl with a Mohican—Rhodelle H. Sigafoos, a sophomore of Bennington. Her classmates laughed and laughed at her, but it was Rhodelle who had the last laugh, for one night a dark, handsome stranger leaped from behind a birch and linked his arm in Rhodelle’s and said, “I am Uncas, the last of the Mohicans—but I need not be the last, dear lady, if you will but Ire my wife.” Today| they are happily married and run a candied-apple stand near Macon, Ga., and havethree little Mohicans named Patti, Maxine, and Laverne. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Uncas and to all of you who have discovered the pleasures of Marlboro and Marlboro's sister cigarette, non-dlter Philip Morris, both made by the sponsors of this column. Theta Xi fraternity Edward . Zimmerman, president. The social professional frater- nity scholarship trophy was pre sented to Alpha Zeta—J am e * Holt, president. The social frat ernity scholarship trophy was presented to Pi Lambda Phi— William Adamsi president, and Theta Xi—who tied for the award. OhfenpftM't*. i Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boysl "and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.") • * • PAGE THREE • 1918 Mm Shulnu