FRIDAY. OCTOBER 24. 1 Police Lights The Campus Patrc bicycles improperly lig The action was pron within the last three v • Charles Willingharr Cress well Will Reti Next Mori Donald M: Cresswell, a Upiver sity alumnus, will retire next month after 32 years vuth the state Department of Agriculture. Cresswell, 67, has been chief of the department's Div sion of Public Information since June 1943. He served r in similar capa cities with thi University f o 12 years a n with the sta) Department < Public Instrut tion for fi v years. Secre t a r y Agriculture W liam L. Henninj praised Cre s: well for his out- c«»jwen standing service to the Common wealth and its farming industry. While ai the University Cress well was editor of The Daily Collegian, 1917-1918, and a member of Lion's Paw. He is also a charter member of the Pennsylvania Public Relations Society, Phi Delta Theta social fraternity and Gamma Sigma Del ta, the honor society of agricul ture. Cress well plans to continue fublic relations activities “on a imited scale" after his retire ment. The first train to come over the newly built Bellefonte Central Railroad arrived at the campus's station in 1891, where Engineer ing Unit D now stands. Bartholomew Resigns ‘ TIM Presidential Post Charles Bartholomew, junior- in aeronautical engineering from Allentown, resigned- from his post as president of the Town Independent Men at Wednesday night's meeting... ' i Bartholomew gave three rea sons for his resignation: academ ic, financial and personal. Nomi nations for a new president will be made at the next meeting, Nov. 5. TIM also set up a committee to conduct a survey oh the hous ing situation for (own indepen dent men since several rjeports on unsatisfactory housing conditions had been made to members of the council. The survey will be. taken to determine how many indepen dent men living in town would like to move to other quarters. The survey will probably last through the fall semester so that as many of the 2000 mem bers of TIM may be contacted as. possible. The results will be "The Toni Confer Sia to Check on Bikes 1 plans to start cracking down on hted at night. lpted by two night-time bike accidents r eeks. , junior in geophysics and geochemis try, on Oct. 3 suffered serious cuts and brush burns of the face , when he drove his bike onto an / unpaved portion of East Waring Ave. On Tuesday Edmund Hirst, freshman in ceramic technology from Philadelphia, received lac erations of the face when the operator of the bike he was riding on crashed into a station wagon on the corner of Pollock and Entrance Roads. In discussing the bike accidents, Frank J. Simes, dean of men, said he wanted to start enforce ment before someone is seriously hurt. No special University legis lation has to be passed, since the commonwealth’s rules of the road cover bicycles as well as cars. The law reads that the front of all bikes shall be equipped with a lighted lamp, visible under nor mal atmospheric conditions for at least 500 feet. Also a red reflec tor or lamp shall be on the rear of all bicycles, with a visibility of 500 feet. The reflector or lamp has to be at least one-and-a-half inches high. These devices must be in use one-half hour after sunset and one-half hour before sunrise. If student cyclists ride in down town State College, they must register with the borough for an inspection of the vehicle. re th Coed Is Selected '5B Rodeo Queen Marilyn Lee Painter, senior in animal husbandry from Pitts burgh, was selected “1958 Rodeo Livestock Queen” in Harrisburg Tuesday night at the Pennsylvania National Horse Show. Miss Painter competed with 14 other Pennsylvania women. The new queen will reign dur ing the Pennsylvania National Livestock Exposition, the Mid- Atlantic National Truck Slow, the World Championship Rodeo and Armed Forces Show at the State Farm Show Building in Harrisburg the week of November 10. ' - • made public some lime in the spring. The survey will also give mem bers of TIM the opportunity to give their ideas and opinions on the proposed Club TIM. The council also discussed the possibility of establishing a sepa rate court for. town offenders so that cases involving town men could be tried by town men. The All-University Cabinet and the Association of Independent Men have also discussed the feas ibility of such a system. Dean of. Men Frank J. Simes has given' his approval of the plan. Further plans for the annual Fall Dance to be held on'Nov. 15 in the Hetcel Union ballroom were also discussed. There will, be ho charge for the dance and refreshments will be sold by the University Food Ser vice. N'T FORGET Druid Circle" :ht and Tomorrow rers produce a hit” —Collegian Tickets at HUB THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA TV Listings To Be Put In Dorms Television schedules will be posted for the first time today on residence hall bulletin boards as a guide for weekend stay-at-homes. The schedules—which will be tacked under a “For Your TV Viewing Pleasure This Weekend” sign—are an idea coming from the office of George L. Donovan, co ordinator of student affairs. Donovan said it is an answer to requests from students that week end movies be shown in the West Halls. He said it is impossible to show movies there because of the expense involved, the lack of space and the fact that it would be unfair hr other living units, including fraternities. There are four TV sets in West Halls alone, Donovan said, and “even most of the late, late, late movies would be better than mov ies we could show on a projector.” “The students just need to know what’s coming up,” he said. The schedules will list pro frams from 6 p.m. Friday to p.m. Sunday. “We cut it at 8 p.m. Sundays,” Donovan said, “since we feel the students should start hitting the books by about then.” Sigma Pi fraternity has initiated Edward Ackley, William Lapit sky, William Glatz, Thomas Neth and Richard Lowrey. New members of Sigma Sigma Sigma are Jane Monafeldt, Mary O’Brien and Joyce Pattison, Initiates of Delta Tau Delta are Robert Bridge, Robert Dockety, Frederic Keck, Roger Kent, Earl Kohlhaas, Delanore Kreiser, Mar tin Lane and Calvin Richardson, New members of Alpha Xi Del ta are Nancy Griffin, Nancy Keene, Connie Coates, Ann Hub bard, Ginny Hengst, Carol McCur ry and Judy Herron. New members of Chi Phi are Elton Holden, Spenser Huston, James Molenari and Robinson Littlewood. Initiates of Phi Sigma Della are Lawrence Abrams, Jeffrey Cohn, Richard Feldman, Richard Horowitz, Abraham Isenberg, Donald Lipson, Martin Podway, Mark Refowich, Stuart Smith, Robert Teifeld and Ronald Watz man. New pledges of Phi Sigma Delta are Gerald Abrams, Sheldon Con tract, Bruce Edelson, Jerome Ger ber, Marshall Goldstein, George Krevsky, Alan Nath and Louis Silverhart. New members of Kappa Della are Cecelia Bilsky, Joyce Carson, Elaine Gehrke, Martha Hickey, Emily Maize, Diane Moritz, San dra Slish, Dorothy- Sijieal, Mari lyn Anne Wiley and Hildred Wise. The first girl student at Penn State was Minerva Whitman, daughter of Professor Whitman. She was permitted to enter bot any classes in 1865, but \yas not registered as a regular student. 39 c ; Kodak Camera Kit IT’S TRUE! during Tha Film lab's "Getting to Know You" SALE . Stop In ■ Oct. 20-25 TODAY'S SPECIALS I—Argutl (23.95) 59c I—Kodak (13.50) 39e Hawkeye H. fteCenfeefowtyßfato *1 106- W. Beaver Avenue State College, Pa. C^o-.dddifa No Student Remain for No more student tickets remain for the appearance of Roberto Iglesias and his Ballet Espanol which is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Recreation Hall. A total of 34 non-student t: purchased at the Hetzel Unii Iglesias, who formed his pre sent company two years ago, be came a Spanish dancer through a mishap in-the bull ring. Like most young Mexican boys, he al ways dreamed of being a bull fighter. One day, while working with a particularly ill-tempered bull, he was gored. _ His recovery was slow and finally his doctor suggested some dance training to help him regain his strength and the use of his body. He soon be came interested in this new field in which he could utilize all the daring, temperament and skill he had developed. His dances express his long standing interest in bull fighting. One of the dances the group will perform Sunday night will dem onstrate that interest. Iglesias studied in Mexico and in San Francisco where he stud ied with the San Francisco Ballet. He soon became a -member of that company's “Corps de Ballet.” He has since pursued his studies in a number of companies. Wherever he has danced, he has sought out the leading au thorities on the dance, particu larly the exoonenls of the Spanish and Latin traditions, and has worked with them. His appearance here marks the fourth of the present Artists Series programs. Federal Service Exam To Be Given Nov. IS The Civil Service Commissiori will hold a Federal Service En trance Examination Nov. 15 in State College. Applications for the test must be sent by Oct. 30 to the Univer sity Placement Service or to the Civil Service Commission, Wash ington 25, D.C. Anyone interested in a career in government service is eligible to take the test. " formal shoes you'll love from MANNEQUIN Only 10,95 is 12.95 - uiiet t^oom is fashion . . . and fashion costs no more -09 S. Allen Tickets Ballet ickets still remain and may be >n desk. They cost $1.25. McAuiey Joins Ed Staff As Associate Prof Dr. John McAuiey, formerly head of the Department of Educa tion at Southern Oregon College, has been named associate profes sor of education at the Univer sity. McAuiey assisted in the estab lishment of a teacher education program for technical schools and has lectured in Australia and New Zealand under the Fulbright pro gram. Development of time : space con cepts among seven and eight year-olds is one of the research projects McAuiey has conducted. He has also published numerous articles in professional education journals. A native of Canada, Dr. Mc- Auiey received his bachelor of arts degree in the classics and bachelor of education degree at the University of Alberta, his mas ter of arts degree in history at the University of British Colum bia and his doctor of education degree at Stanford University. Pink and black were adopted as Penn State's first colors in 1887. 4-Pc. 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