PAGE TWO F R £ UNIVERSITY STUDENTS WILL sit by sections in Beaver Field for Saturday’s home game with VMI Fieshinen will sit in the end zone, sophomores in NC, NB, NA and WK; juniors in NJ, NK, NL, NM, and seniois and graduate students in F,K. EJ, EH, and EG. The same seating plan Will be in effect for all home contests. WSGA to Permit . Party Plans Dining Hall Smoking Revampmg Discussion Coed smoking will be peimitted in all dining halls for a -phe p ro p osec j p] an f or re _ 2-week trial period beginning from the time Food Service organizing University P a r t v can supply ashtrays. : will be discussed and voted on Women voted on the smoking question at dinner Mon day. The vote was announced at a Women’s Student Govern-' monl Association Senate meeting, last night. _ | After the trial peiiod a new vote will be taken, j Smoking will be on a trial 1 basis because the vote was very close in two dining halls, Sim l mans and McElwain. In Redi- I ter and Atherton, a large ma | jority favored smoking. In the i Waring Hall, where coeds eat j with men and the men are per ; milted to smoke, only a few yoled against the change. Since freshmen are not per imitted to smoke outside of their j living quarters during customs, I Jessie Janjigian, WSGA presi-; laent, said the dining halls wouldj be considered part ot their living! quarters. i WSGA will check with Food Service on the possibility of al lowing meal tickets to be used lintelchangeably in either of two idming halls on either side of Redder. j Women are now permitted to I eat only in the Redifer dining hall specified by their meal ticket number. Margaret Mc- Pherson, junior senator, felt this should be done because sometimes the line is much longer in one dining hall than the other. A longer breakfast hour will Continued on page five Frosh Women, i Dormitory Men Plan Socials Freshman women and men liv-j ing m residence halls will partiei-i pate in one of 58 socials to be ; held in living units tonight and tomorrow and Monday, through Wednesday of next week. j Students living in the residence] halls will plan the socials. Mar-j jone Pharr and Ellen Evler, resi dence hall program leaders from the dean of women's office, and Wayne Page, residence hall co ordinator for recreation from the dean of men’s office, are in charge] of the piogram. j The socials will include dancing and games and refreshments will! be served. Residence hall coun selors of each unit are in charge] of the separate parties which are, part of the recreational piogram planned by the dean of women's office. Women may contact Miss Pharr or Miss Eyler if they want to plan anv event to be held in the resi dence halls. Dioda, Rand Show Open Exhibit to Feature Varied Mediums Throughout the semester 16 art exhibits held on the main floor of the Hetzel Union Building will display a vari ety of art to suit almost every one's taste. Sculpture, drawings, paintings, prints, architecture, crafts, and photographs by professionals, art students, and even small children will be shown. The first exhibit, sculptures and di a wings by Adolph Dioda and graphic arts by Paul Rand, stalled Friday and will continue until Oct. 3. From Oci. 7 to 23 photographs of the Angkor Wat monuments in Cambodia, photographed by Lake Wan Tho, will be shown. Members of the art faculty wilt exhibit their work from Oct. 28 to Nov. 16. From Nov. 21 to Dec. 10 prints, of 11 professional Ameiican ar tists will be shown. Works from the Betty Parsons Gallery in New York by Donati, Gueirero, Pousett-Dart, and H. Stern will be shown from Dec. 15 By JANET DURSTINE 1 to Jan. 12. Drawing by children ings and drawings will be dis , I from 29 countries will be ex-'P la >’ e d m a one map show from 1 lnibted from Jan. 6to Jan. 23. Ap ‘ ll 5 4 t0 , Marc f h v. 1 Fr«m c r a L New talent of 1960, chosen oy From Feb. 5 to Feb. 24 the museum directors and critics, will d ct W u n £ S ' and .P rl " ls have its premiere showing from ■ l Bru ~t Sn w be April Bto April 22 along with the' shown along with a photogra- gl . aphiC arls o{ Ben Sh * hn . phic study of the contemporary xhe lasl exhibit. April 29 to ! theatre in America. May will present the talent of Prize winning architectural;the students from the departments photographs and paintings bv|of art and art education. All ex- 1 Bill Hansen will be shown fromjhibits are chosen by the Exhibi jFeb. 29 to March‘l7. Then, as ajtion Committee headed by Dr. Jtnbute to Edwin Zoller, profes-.George Pappas, assistant profes sor of art for 30 years. Ims paint-'sor of art and art education. I La Vie Staff All Those Interested in the 1960 La Vie and the present staff are urged to attend a meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday, September 24, in 10 Sparks. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA at an Executive Committee meeting at 4:30 p.m. Sunday. ! The committee also decided to 'hold regular weekly meetings at 4:30 p.m. on Sundays. Members will be notified where the meet-' ing will take place. _ The plan for party reorganiza tion is built around five standing committees and an overall chair man, who would coordinate com mittee activities. j The standing committees would I probably include a Secretariat! and Nominations, Ev a 1 uations, Reorganizations, Campaign and Coordinations Committees. The present Executive Com- 1 mittee would be dissolved. Frank Pearson, party chair !man, explained that this arrange jment would make for greater ef jficiency and would distribute the woik more evenly. There would also be a commit tee to screen prospective candi dates, Pearson said, and to go over candidate’s applications. WMM Staff to Meet A meeting for candidates and; staff members of WDFM, the ] student operated radio station,! will be held at 8 tonight in 114] Carnegie. i WDFM is holding auditions for reporters and writers for the news staff. 3&AVBP. Pi£i*Q W»*F»*«* Dairy Will Receive Larger Sales Room A larger sales room to handle University dairy products is being constructed as an addition to Borland Laboratory. The new sales room will be a one-story addition which will be built to the south of Borland Laboratory, near 'the entrance to the present sales room. Ground breaking was held last week expected to be finished next April 1. The present sales room, opened when Borland Laboratory was completed in 1932, has lor many years been inadequate to serve students and others using the facilities, and to market the products of the creamery, ex plained Dr. Donald V. Joseph son, professor and head of the Department of Dairy Science. The new sales room will be equipped with self-service cases, a long dairy bar and tables that will seat about 40 people. Dr. Josephson said that only University products will be sold except for sandwiches and other smaller items. Dairy products sold in the sales room are products re sulting from the instructional and research program of the de partment of dairy science. Construction of the new sales room witl make the space now occupied available for a research laboratory. \ For many years, the University, maintained milk delivery routes; in the area to dispose of dairy products, but the loutes were dis continued in June, and the sale! of University dairy products is now centered in the campus sales room. Scholastic Action Hits Vz Undergrads Nearly one-third of all under graduates enrolled at the Uni versity and on the Commonwealth Campuses during the last spring semester were subject to scholas tic action. According to the Office of the Registrar, 4060 actions, including 722 drops, 1269 probations and 2069 warnings were made. As a result of these actions 5.65 per cent of the student body was asked to leave the University and its campuses. Of the 4067 freshmen enrolled, almost 50 per cent were given scholastic warnings, probations or drops from the University. Percentages for other classes were sophomores 37.02, juniors! 23.67 and seniors 11.08. I Fraternities to Hold Frosh Open House The only fraternity open house of the semester for freshmen will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. All fraternities will be open to give interested men a chance- to visit and become familiar with their houses and the campus fra ternity system. Sunday’s open house will be the only time freshman men will be permitted in fraternity houses for social affairs. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1959 By JAMES WHALEN Officer Election Change Asked By HEc Council Members of the Home Eco nomics Student Council voted to recommend to the Inter-Council Council Board that an amend ment be made to their council constitution concerning the elec tion of its officers. According to the constitution, [officers are elected at the end of [March. Since the president of i the Home Economics council of j ten is involved with student 'teaching, the newly elected presi dent is frequently left without an ex-ofheer’s much needed help. If the constitution is amended so that elections are held at the semester break, this problem would be ended. In other business, Anthony [Canike was appointed chairman of freshman elections which will be held in October. Judy Heckert, council presi dent, also appointed Nancy Camp bell and Martha Larson the home economics representatives on the Spring Week committee. Tropical Weather |To Remain Today Hot and humid tropical air con tinues to hold sway over most of the entire eastern half of the na tion. Temperatures reached 86 de grees in the State College area yesterday, and similar tempera tures may be expected both to day and tomorrow. Afternoon and evening showers are possible today and tomorrow, but the odds are slightly less than even that we will see any rain be fore late Saturday. The University admitted its first women students in 1871. [They numbered six. Today, there jare more than 5000 women en rolled. Feat: 1:58, 3:52, 5:46, 7:40, 9:34 urn warn SOIMOSSKS i** « t&s frJMscraa PLUS - NEWS - CARTOONS ★CATHAPI NOW: 1:20. 4:00, 6:40, 9:25 ★NITTfIMY Now Doors Open 6:45 YUL BRYNNER CLAIRE BLOOM “THE BB66AMEER” —SATURDAY TONY CURTIS “The Perfect Furlough” for the building,
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