FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1960 Junior Residents To Attend Workshop A workshop for all junior residents in the women's resi dence halls will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Nit tany Lion Inn. Dean of Women, Dorothy J. Lipp, will open the session which is to acquaint junior residents with their functions and responsibilities. After intro ductory remarks by several of the Faculty Women To Have Use Of White Hall Faculty women and wives of faculty members will soon be able to use the facilities in White for two periods each week. The .first meeting to orientate the participants with the facilities and proposed program will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in 105 White. An activity period will fol low the organization meeting. The program has been started in response to a large number of requests, Martha A. Adams, as sistant professor of physical edu cation for women, said. The activity periods will be held on Tuesdays from 3 to 4:30 p.m. and on Thursdays from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Badminton, bowling, swimming and volleyball will be offered Tuesday. A dance and exercise group led by Mrs. G. K. Nelson, wife of G. Kenneth Nel son, professor of accounting, will be held on Thursdays., A nominal fee will be charged for bowling, but all other activ ities will be free. Religious Author to Tally At Rufus Jones Lecture Dr. Anna C. Brinton, author of books on religion and liberal arts, will speak at the annual Rufus Jones lecture at 8 p.m. Sunday in 121 Sparks. Sponsored by the University Christian Association and the State College Friends Meeting. the talk will be on "The Quaker World Outlook." • Disciplinary Action Taken Against Two Students for Misdemeanors A first se?nester student was put on suspended suspension and a sixth semester student was given disciplinary probation this week. according to Leroy Austin, assis tant dean of men. The freshman, a student in business administration fr o m Philadelphia, was, put on sus pended suspension for the rest of the semester by the Senate Sub committee on Discipline. The student was sentencetl for repeated misbehavior in the resi dence halls. particularly for mis use of a fire extinguisher, and for showing disrespectful and emotional behavior• toward the residence hall staff members dur ing this semester. He was scheduled to appear be fore tribunal but because of in volvement in further difficulties he was finally referred to the subcommittee. The junior, a student in ,hcm istry and physics from Baltimore, Md., was put on disciplinary pro- community coordinators, small groups will form to discuss the topics of leadership and responsi bility, communications and serv ice. . At present there are 150 jun ior residents working with the dean's office, Mrs. Hugh Davi. son, assistant dean of women. said yesterday. The proportion of girls under the jurisdiction of each resident is not at' the hoped for level of one to 25. The largest group. Mrs. Davison said, has a proportion of one to 50. The duties of the junior resi dents are covered by the three topics to be discussed at the workshop, Mr 5 . Davison ex plained. Leadership and re sponsibility can be interpreted as general counseling, she said, while communications will cov er the maintenance of efficient contact between the girls and the dean's office. In the field of service, the jun ior residents will assist with ad ministrative duties such as col lection of sign out sheets, dos ing the, doors at curfew time, tabulation of - recreational inter est sheets and general activity programming, Mrs. Davison add ed. The selection of the junior resi :dents was made on the basis of •nomination by the •women's hat (societies, interviews by members of the dean of women's staff and recruiting by senior residents of the individual dormitories. Qualifications for selection as junior resident were a good dorm itory record, and an All-Univer sity average of a 2.0, Mrs. Davison said. bation for the rest of the s,?mes ter by the dean of men's'office. He had flouted the authority of the residence hall counselors and refused to cooperate in fire drills. required residence hall meetings and refused to respect quiet hour regulations, Austin said. Under both suspended suspen sion and disciplinary probation. the student's activities are lim ited. Although they may be mem bers of organizations and parti cipate in their activities they nmy not be officers or committee chair men. Also, they may not partici pate in varsity sports although they can participate in intramur als. If a student misbehaves while under suspended suspension he may be suspended immediately by the dean of men's office. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , • I . • • • • • • THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Ferguson To 'Storm' Rec Hall Tickets are still available for the Maynard Ferguson concert to be held at 8 p.m. Sunday in Recreation Hall. The jazz trumpeter and his twelve-piece band are being spon sored by the Penn State Jazz Club. Ferguson formed his jazz band in 1956 after playing with such name bands as Boyd Raeburn, Jimmy Dorsey, Charlie Barnet and Stan Kenton. Ferguson is one of the few trumpet players who hits "double high C" easily. To quote the mu sic critic of the New York Her ald Tribune. "Mr. Ferguson eith er has a lip of rock, or else he uses a mouthpiece with a bore the size of a sipping straw. Such sounds as he produces are no where in the trumpet register; how he made them is a secret he alone knows." When asked why he has such a large band, he has said, "I find that twelve men give me all I.l' "bigness" I want and I can ope. ate better at very fast tempi when it comes to swinging be cause essentially it's lighter than larger orchestras." Tickets are on sale at the NU desk, The Harmony Shop and the Nittany News. Tickets are $1 for members of the Jazz Club and $1.50 for non-members. WRA Hockey Club' Defeats Bucknell The Women's Field Hock& Club, sponsored by the Women Recreation Association, partici paled in a fall sports day lasi Saturday with Bucknell Univer city and Juniata College. Penn State won by beati' Bucknell 3 to 0, while their gar. with Juniata ended in a 0-0 ti The third game between Junia and Bucknell also ended with scoring. The games were played on the women's athletic fields. FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES: Have you signed up for LEADERSHIP TRAINING NOW -- at the HUB Desk First Meeting OCT. 26 . 119 Osmond 7:00 p.m. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 9-12 P.M. Dress -- Semi-formal Tickets on sale at HUra desk or at the door for $2 a couple. A. I. M. & LEONIDES AUTUMN BALL HUB BALLROOM The renowned •A.i. M. BAND makes its 1960 Debut ISchiller Gets $2500 Grant Roger W.• Schiller, instructor of mechanical engineering, will receive a $2500 grant from the American Machine and Foundry Co. to assist in completing re search projects initiated during the current academic year. Schiller, one of three recipients named, is a candidate for a doc torate degree in mechanical en gineering. He is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the American 'Society of Electrical Engineers and the American Ordnance Association. He will investigate possibilities inherent in a pulse hydraulic system where energy is trans mitted by pressure pulses rather than oil flow. CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS 50c BUYS 17. WORDS present the Refreshments Free SAVE UP TO 50% DANCE PROGRAMS Personalised matches, napkins Commercial Printing 353 E. College Ave. AD 8.67,34 WHERE ELSE... could you buy a Japanese abacus a Teach-Yourself Swahile book a guide to becoming President colored Origami paper a 300-page volume of POGO a 500-page novel written entirely in Russian . . . but . . . The Niffany News 108 West College Ave. • PAGE THREE