TUESDAY. OCTOBER TWO FOURSOMES I cordings were the other group is the C I Simes Places Responsibility For indict Parties With TIM A rooming house has no status as a unit for holding coed parties and the Town Inde pendent Men Council would have to take the responsibility for enforcing University regula tions at any such parties, Frank J. Simes, dean of men, said. After hearing the TIM proposal to petition the Senate Committee on Student Affairs to allow coeds to attend parties held in independent rooming houses, Simes said that at 500 Pint Goal Set for Annual Blood Drive The American Red Cross blood mobile, which will visit the cam pus Nov. 4 and 5, has set the goal for this year's blod drive at 500 pints. Students are donating blood should sign up at the Hetzel Union Building from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the week of Oct. 26 to 30 A sign-up desk will be located across from the assembly room. Lester Phillips, chairman of the campus drive, said that any stu dent 18 years of age or older may donate blood. However, he added, any unmarried students between the ages of 18 and 21 must have a consent and release slip, signed by their parents, with them at the time of their donation. Consent and release slips may be obtained now at the HUB desk. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, and Gamma Sigma Sigma, national service sorority, are helping with the drive and members of both or ganizations will be at , the sign-up desk to answer questions. Phillips said that members of the Army and Air Force ROTC units who donate a pint of blood will receive merits from their re spective service branches. Bus Service-- (Continued from page one) Toney said no buses would on Sunday. Although no definite fares have been set yet, Toney said the expected fare for a south bound trip would be 25 cents from North of Clemson Motors and 20 cents from south. The fares would be reversed on a northbound trip. The company's schedule now calls for the buses to leave the most northern road in Park For est Village - and go south on Rt. 322, to Jack Beasly Ford, to Over look Heights, back to Rt. 322, to Cherry Lane, to N. Allen St., to Hillcrest Ave., to Fairway Rd., to Ridge Ave., back to Rt. 322 and to College Ave. and S. Allen St. —Nearly everybody reads a newspaper nearly every day. It follows that practice ly every sale of every product 1 anufactured in the U.S. and Ca ada will be made to a newspaper reader in 0, 1959 REM I I OF SINGERS—The Chordettes (left), stars of radio, TV, nightclubs, and re ain feature of Sunday's show to kick-off the United Nations Week. The ord Blenders, a comedy barber shop quartet from Easton. By NICKI WOLFORD present a rooming house has no status as far as the University is concerned. He explained that since they do not have charters and are not organized, the University could not penalize the group for a violation but could only punish individuals. TIM would have to take the re sponsibility for enforcing the reg ulations at these social events; then if the rules weren't followed, TIM would take the blame and the privileges of having the par ties would be denied, Simes said. Under a proposal presented to TIM Council last week, coeds would be allowed to attend par ties in off-campus housing units which would be under a board of control similar to that of the Interfraternity Council. Only those houses which are large enough to hold parties come under this proposal—thus apartment parties for coeds are ruled out. Philip Haines, TIM president, said he had been asked by men living in four houses downtown to bring the proposal before coun cil. Haines said a board of control would have to be set up and then each house wishing to have a par ty would have to petition the board. In devising a plan, Haines said a survey would have to be taken to determine how many houses have the facilities to have organized parties. These social privileges for in dependent men will be more ne cessary if the IFC Encampment recommendation that fraternity parties be closed to indepen dents is passed, he said. Haines appointed Kelly Mather, council member, head of a com mittee to investigate the proposal and come up with a feasible plan acceptable to both the council and the dean of men's office. The plan would then go to the Senate Committee on Student Affairs. ' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Only 2 More Days ... ME;EMII/11 MEM= Yale Fans Agog Over Eli Success NEW HAVEN, Conn. (LT') Astonishing Yale's football rec ord of four straight victor ies with out yielding a point has old and young Blues agog. They were delighted with the newspaper headlines which were saying the boola boolers were the nation's only major footballers with an uncrossed goal line. The tables down at Mory's, Yale's famed eating place, were jumping dining luncheon yester day. There were cheers and songs. Coach Jordan Olivar and his Ivy League doormats of 1958 were the toasts of the Elis. The Bulldog has teet h and they've been sharp on the attack and defense so far against Con necticut, Brown, Columbia and Cornell. He still has to face Col gate, Dartmouth, powerful Penn sylvania and traditional rivals Princeton and Harvard. The Blue should get by hapless Colgate here Saturday without too much trouble—even without permitting a tally. The tougher days are up ahead. —ln the past two years, news paper publishers spent more than $150,000,000 to modernize their plants and equipment ; • Delivery on •-.;: Hoagies Hamburgers Steaks Cheeseburgers' Pizza Sausage and. Soft Drinks 9 P.M. till 12 P.M. MORRELL'S AD 8-8381 •... • ..• • ' Banquet Opens IFC Workshop A banquet will begin this year's Interfraternity Council workshop at 6 tonight in the Penn State Room of the Nittany Lion Inn. According to Richard Haber, IFC workshop chairman, Robert Kelly, a member of the National Interfraternity Council Executive Committee will ; give the keynote address. "The banquet was placed first Campus to Hold on the agenda this year to en courage better participation in the workshop," Haber said. : UN Celebration Tomorrow the workshops will move to the fraternity houses 1 0 ct. 23 to 25 with a program of faculty af ter-dinner talks. Each participating fraternity', Edward B Marks, executive di has chosen a member of the fac— rector of the United Nations W ulty to speak on some aspect of Weekend Committee, said vester fraternity-faculty or fraternity-;day, that tlie University will be town relations. ,among the first of the nation's Thursday the individual work shops will begin at the fraternity,universities to participate on a houses of the committee chair- large scale in World Refugee Year. men. i President Eisenhower _ recently The workshops and the chair- proclaimed June 30, 1959, to July men are presidents, Hart Lan- men , 1960, as World Refugee Year ger. Sigma Chi; treasurers, Ste- ; The University will celebrate ven Brown, Tau Kappa Epsilon: ' ;United Nations Weekend front house managers, Lawrence lOct. 23 to 25 with a United Na- Abrams, Phi Sigma Delta pledge 1 dons Festival, dedication of a presidents, Jack Crosby. Delta i plaque, a community peace con- Tau Delta; caterers, Robert O.- I f . erence, United Nations dinners Connel, Sigma Nu; scholarship ,in fraternities and residence halls and activities, Andrew Schultz, Chi Phi; alumni and public re- land a musical program. "Getting lations, Donald Clagett, Acacia; Ito Know You " social, Edward Kormos, Sigma jchairman of the UN Weekend Carmella LaSpada, general Pi; rushing, John Young, Sigma 1 Alpha Epsilon: pledgemasters, !Committe, said the program was arranged with a 3-fole purpose: Steven Ott, Phi Gamma Delta. 1 The workshop program is held To create student concern with l annually to give fraternity men a , international affairs, with World chance to meet and solve coin- Refugee Year and with the stu mon problems and to find ways of dent's role within the world to continuing improvements in the da r • fraternity system at the Univer sity. West Halls Elect Council Treasurer Bruce Baker, senior in business administration from Johnsville, was elected treasurer of West Halls Council last night.. The council also announced that mothers and women who are not students at the University will be permitted in West Halls men's rooms from 2 to 5 p.m. on Sunday afternoons with the approval of the individual dormitory units. However, chaperones must be present when younger women are in the rooms. A special committe to deter mine the merit of establishing a listening room in Waring Lounge will be selected by council pres ident, Duane Johnson. cats, if you dig NITTANY SWEATERS as an exponential function of temperture times the neatness constant, you'll fl i p when you derive ds/dt as meaning Man, get with it, you need at least one new . Ililiany Swale', if you swing the correct inter pretation, you'll follow the trend to a 11111,1,1 y &l ea l er Norm Kahn, AD 8-1591 . Armando Vega, Beta Theta Pi Jerry Garfinkle, AD 8-1742 P.S.—Make the cool scene and win a free sweater in the NITTANY SWEATER - a-week contest. Last week, the win ner was Harry Grebe with his answer of 630 yards. The offi cial yardage was 617. nittan y Sweateri Write Box 494, State College PAGE SEVEN Look Here! Penn State Class Rings Get Exquisitely designed class rings in 10, 12, and 14 penny-weight sizes. A full line featuring yel low gold, green gold, white gold and brilliant antique sterling in stock now. A Herff Jones original, the new Starlight stone, is available in blue spinel and red ruby upon order. MUR'S JEWELRY CO. 220'S. ALLEN ST.