The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 28, 1959, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
! 1 - " "
—Collegian Photo by 11 ayne Benjamin
PRACTICING WHAT THEY PREACH—faculty members of the
School of Fine Art; and the College of Engineering and Architec
tut e prepare to display their alt work in the HUB. Role Enge, right,
professor of architecture aids Bruce Shubaken, instructor of art
in the "fine art" of hanging pictures.
Shapley to Speak
In Darwinian Series
Students will not need tickets to attend the lecture "The
W
Origin and Development of Earth as a Habitable Planet"; SGA to Gi v e
to be given by Harlow Shapley, director emeritus of the Har- 'Extended Hours
yard College Observatory, at 8 p.m. Sunday in Recreation Hall.:
Students will be admitted upon presentation of their For Activities
matriculation cards. Tickets for
Student Forum
Will Discuss
IFC Functions
Radio stations WDFM and
WMAJ will present "The Stu
dent Forum of the An" at 9 to-
The program topic will be the;
make-up and functions of the In-i
terfraternity Council including ;
workshops, th e Eneampment,;
Christmas parties, and other ac-t
tivities in which IFC takes part. j
Vincent Marino, senior in busi-i
ness administration from Clear-1
field, will be the moderator.
Special guests will be Ronald',
Resh, IFC vice president; Gil- ,
bert Sergeant, IFC secretary-!
treasurer; Chester Lucido, junior.
in business administration from"
Bethel Park; Richard Haber, jun-I
for in business administration ,
horn Pottsville; and Arthur Mil-!
tenberger, senior in business ad--;
nustration from Schellsburg,
Tickets for Frost
Available Today
Tickets will be available at
1 p.m. today at the Het7el Union
desk for the Robert Frost Ar
tNts' Series program.
Non-student tickets will go on
sale at 9 a.m. tomorrow.
The fifth Artists' Series per
formance of the year will be held
at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Schwab
Auditorium. Frost will read selec
tions from his poetry which en
visions life in America
Art Hodes and his Dixieland
Band have been invited to ap
pear on December 13, in Recrea
tion Hall as a part of the 1959-60
Artists' Series, Mrs. Nina Brown,
chairman, announced. Attempts
are also being made to secure the
Alodern Jazz Quartet to perform
during Spring Week.
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
non-students will be on sale start-, Women's Student Government
ing at 1 p M. today at the Hetzel•Association Judicial decided yes-
Union desk. They cost $1.25 each.'t er d a y to allow coeds extended
Shapley's lecture will be the !hours for certain activities.
first of five on the general sub
ject "The Origin and Develop
ment of Man and His Culture,"
scheduled by the University
Lecture Series in commemor
ation of the 100fh anniversary
of the publication of Charles
Darwin's "Origin of Species."
Each lecture in the series will
:be presented by an outstanding , ,
scientists in his field.
Shapley, who will arrive on Sat
urday. w , ll be met by the "hos
pitality committee" of the Lec
ture Series Committee at 3.30 p.m
at the Martinsburg airport.
He will have dinner with the
Lecture Series Committee at 6
p m. Sunday in the Nittany Lion
Inn, The dinner will be preceded
by a press conference starting at
510 p m. in the lounge of the Inn
with members of the Daily Col
legian, Centre Dai 1— Times,
WDFM and WMAJ present.
After the lecture at 8 p.m.
there will be a reception for
Shapley in the Helen Eakin Ei
senhower Chapel lounge.
He will give another 30-minute
lecture Monday which will be ki
nescoped in the University tele
vision studio. Shapley 'will also
prepare a manuscript of his lec
ture to be published by the Uni
versity Press along with the man
uscipts of the other lecturers in
the series.
Shapley will then leave for De-
Pauw University in Greencastle,
Indiana, where he is scheduled to
give another lecture Monday.
Ed Council Self-Nominations
Self-nomination blanks for the
Education Student Council are
available for freshmen at the
Hetzel Union desk.
TONY'S
BARBER SHOP
231 E. BEAVER
AND
134 E. COLLEGE
8 to 5:30 , Daily
Close Sat. at 1
Call AD 8-8012 For An
Appointment or Just Drop In
Dean Lipp Suggests Ideal Situation;
Rules Founded on Maturity Level
1
. By BARB YUNK ied to the people who have the
Five thousand women and most interest and knowledge.
, his she compares to delegating the
no rules. ;responsibility for setting meal
This is the situation which ri - hours and menus
'•
to the food sere
would confront Dean of Worn- ice and the re
en
Dorothy J. Lipp for a short' sponsibility for
1 1 time if she could follow her de-' . • rooming policy
-44, ,-,, to the hou s -
1
: sire to completely revamp wom- Awl: ing department
en's regulations. The ideal situa-' 1 where the neces
hen, Dean Lipp said, would be to' ,
~ : sary experience
i abolish all rules and start over N 11C::" ,i....? ,' exists.
again, making the rules more real- : Thus, ti nd e r
_
istic. Nl*" • her encourage
; The ideal rules would be 1 ment Dean
those made according to "abil- Dean Lipp Lipp describes
1 ity." This ability could be trans- , her attitude as. "Go, Go, Go"
lated to mean responsibility,
she said, those who prove them
selves to be more mature would
find their rules more lenient
and flexible.
Dean Lipp feels that, "We have
too many rules. There are so many
rules now, that it's impossible to:
avoid breaking some of them."
She describes her "philosophy',
of rules" as the need for adjust-j
ment; the difference between or
der and chaos.
She believes that rules are
needed whenever there are two
or more people involved. Even
between just two people there
must be some agreement, how
ever inofrmal, to decide how
things shall be done. However,
these should be of a minimum
number and to the point.
Dean Lipp feels that the forma
tion of rules should be entrust
Permission for the extended
hours would be arranged throughl
the Dean of Women's office by
the person in charge of the ac
tivity.
Some of the activities under
this new ruling would be the IFC-'
Panhel Sing and coffee hours dur-'
ing the spring sorority rush.
Dorothy Toklish, chairman of
judicial, said that if a girl works
on an activity for which extended
hours have not previously been
:arranged and finds that she can
not get back to the dormitory by
her regular hour, she will not be
,given a penalty if she calls her
hostess before that hour,
Judicial also decided to again
allow a girl with a 1 a.m. removal,
lenient weekend or strict week
end to postpone the penalty.
LaVie Announces
Late-Photo Times
Seniors who did not have their
picture taken when their college
was scheduled, should report to
the Penn State Photo Shop as soon
as possible so they can be includ
ed in the 1960 LaVie.
Other seniors are requested to
check posters and the Collegian
for their scheduled time. All
January and June graduates, as
well as January graduates of
1961 are eligible for this year's
LaVie.
An activity card should be filled
out at the Photo Shop but if ac
tivities are added later, the LaVie
office should be notified.
Campus
Restaurant
142 BAST COLLEGE AVE.
So Close ...
So Convenient
the Women's Student Govern
ment Association has become a
more responsible • and powerful
body, she said. WSGA is now an
organization which is free to re-
view and alter women's regula—
tions in light of the present day
situation.
The purpose of rules is to ed-I
ucate, not to limit. Rules which:
limit, according to Dean Lipp, do'
not encourage anyone to become:
an adult.
To tell women what they
may or may not wear, the said,
does not solve the problem. Ed
ucating women in good taste
so that they may arrive at this
conclusion for themselves would
produce more long-range good.
Excessive rules do not produce
;mature young women, she said.
!They produce little girls who must
rely on the University or the dean
of women to tell them what to do,
Speech Prof Publishes
Articles on Arguments
Harold P. Zelko, professor of
speech, has written an article
'How Not to Win an Argument,"
which was published in a June
issue of "Family Weekly," a na
tional Sunday supplement. The
article, now being revised and
reprinted,' will appear in the
`'Catholic Digest" in November.
Zelko has developed the same
subject in a booklet, "How to
Avoid Argument," which has
been published by Employee Re
lations, Inc., as one of their Help-
Your-Self Booklet series.
* CATHAUM
NOW SHOWING
THE FEMALE JUNGLE!
IwJERRY '
aN
n E .BEST oF „
" lc, .'
EVERYTHING
oN.,„Ascopg COLOR by DE LUXE
_ • O^I.ONIC SOUhD Wini Ell
Hope Lange Martha Hyer
* NITTANY
NOW DOORS OPEN 6:45
A CHILLING THRILLER!
—Winner of Two British
Academy Awards!—
"ORDERS TO KILL"
EDDIE ALBERT
James Robertson Justice
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1959
when to do it and how to, do it.
For this reason, any new rules
directly concerningthe women
students will be designed to pro
mote individual responsibility.
The best way to plan rules,
she said, is to focus your at
tention on your unique prob
lems, taking into some consid
eration things which have been
successful at other schools. -
She feels that, if there are a
large number of violations of a
set of lutes, something is wrong
with them. "Rules which are made
,by coeds should be kept by coeds."
I Rules are not a static element,
;she added. In order to be effec
tive. they must he continuously
evaluated and tate! cd.
rAT C t`it:t."C GE r , A -
-HELD OVER—
,
":TAL—K I
CO STAMM,/
mr " TONY RANDALL
°A;lrm"'A'sToTEa THELMA itillEit
NICK ADAMS. MARCEL AAUP •JULL4 RUDE
LA AAVAN PRODUCtION • A UNIVERSAL INTERMAINNIAL RELEASE
Feat.: 1:30, 3:31, 5:32, 7:33, 9:34
Listen
to
PENN STATE
vs.
WEST VIRGINIA
FOOTBALL
Saturday, 1:25
Warmup 1:00
WMAJ --1450
there's More Than
Meets the Eye
Perhaps you have missed
it; many people have. Nit
tany News has a
BACK ROOM
Well, not exactly a back
room, but a short wing to
the right at the back of she
store. It's packed full of your
favorite paperbacks and gift
items, so when you drop in,
be sure to see the whole
store.
Niliany News
On College Ave.
Next to the Corner