WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1961 IFC Changes Procedure; Meetings Now Informal The Interfraternity Council meetings have a new look Richard Pigossi, newly elected IFC president, conducted his first meeting Monday night at Phi Gamma Delta fra ternity. Future meetings of ,the council will be held at the various fraternity houses, he said Pigossi said he hopes that this more informal atmosphere will help fraternity presidents to be come better acquainted with one another and thus make it easier to discuss common problems. In the past, meetings have been held in the Hetzel Union Assembly Room under more formal restrictions of parlia mentary procedure. ; The structure of the meeting 'has also been altered somewhat. A general discussion period has been instituted to give members and officers an opportunity to bring up matters of fraternity in terest for discussion. This should also give a more unified group feeling, Pigossi said. According to Bruce R. Schrack,' At the meeting Gerald Logue, owner, the park will be locatedlicacia fraternity president, was at the corner of Sowers Street andlappointed assistant vice president! E. College Avenue and will open,and scholarship chairman. This early in May. It will operate from position replaces the IFC member 1 to 11 p.m. seven days a week ;at large, Pigossi said. and if there is enough interest„ Fraternities were reminded lessons will be offered in the by Eugene Chaiken, secretary morning, he added. ! treasurer, that April 26 is the The biggest rage since the deadline for returns on the Jazz 1 "hula hoop," the trampoline is! Festival. Chaiken also said that I currently experiencing a revival; a complete report of the IFC I By SARALEE ORTON around the country as summer: Workshops held last week of This is the third article in a series on the activities of the entertainment. Unlike the hula which he was chairman would Alumni Association as they concern students, hoop fad, Schrack feels that the b e sent to the president upon - tra n trampoline will be around for a! completion. The pews in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Meditation long time. i Richard Moyer, IFC vice presi- Chapel and the dock at the Stone Valley recreation area are "We will start operationln w- ith - --dent announced that application part of Alumni Fund contributions to the University. trampolines at a rate of 50 cents forms for committee chairman-, per half hour," Schrack said. Spe-iships will be available at the HUB Ross B. Lehman, assistant executive secretary of the cial rates will be offered to groups idesk or the IFC office and must, Alumni Association, said the Al reserving trampolines in advance.!be returned by April 21. umni Fund began in 1953, and Last summer Schrack operated!' Women will be allowed in the i since then over $1.5 million has a trampoline park outside of State fraternityhouses April 26 and been given by alumni, friends, College. He said he decided to.27th until 10 p.m., Gary Robinson, faculty and staff clubs, and cor move the park into town for the!chairman of IFC board of control porations to support projects for convenience of students. (sand. This is to enable groups to which neither state nor federal, I work on spring week float prof- money is provided. • CommumstAttempf In closing comments, Dean Wil- ects, he said, i The Senior Class Gift, pre : se nsed at the end of each year, Imur E. say. IFC advisor had; is donated through the Alumni Fails-Theodorson ,this to say. "Last week was a good. Fund, he said. Despite an intensive and ruth !week for IFC—it started with the! I.yorkshops and finished with the less campaign, employing almost Over $ 9 40,000 was contributed every strategy imaginable, the Jazz Festival Friday night, which ;through the Alumni Fund for the Communist attempt to obliterate was aof. Meditation successs.. A lot o f Meditation Chapel, some $57,000 religion has failed, says Dr. planning and effort was put into help furnish the Hetzel Union ;to make this a successful week." Building and $21.000 for acquisi- George A. Theodorson, assistant, he said. 'tions to the Pattee Library, ac professor of sociology. I cording to Lehman. He reports this conclusion in: In addition, he said, approxi an article, "The Religious Institu-{C hess Club to Sponsor Imately $60,000 has been used to tions in the Soviet Orbit," pub-1 lielp develop the Stone Valley rec lished in the Journal of Human for Women reation area, and some 200 stu- Relat ions. I A four-round, swiss systern,dents have been aided by Alumni "This failure was due tOichess tournament will open today,Memorial Scholarships. the development of underground for all prospective women mem-' The Graduate School emer churches, the unwitting reform of:bers of the Penn State Chess; the churches by the Communists,icl u b . the strength of national traditionsd gency loan fund was set up 1 last year, Lehman added, io pro and the need of the Communists Women interested in entering vide short-term loans orf grad forl the support : of, the churches' should call Tony Paulus, club: uate students who need help in in time of crisis, which led to Tresident. or sign-up in the Hetzel meeting last-minute graduate • night. 1 exrises. Alumni of the Gradu- necessary modifications in the!Union cardroom to_______. pe -- approach of the Communist gov-i ernments to religion," he says Ed Prof Gives Speech Town to Get Trampoline Pork Soon The newest, bounciest craze in entertainment—a trampo line park—will soon be avail able in State College. The "trampolining" will be done right at the doorstep of the University across from South Halls. To Business Teachers Dr. Dorothy H. Veon, professor! of education, recently addressed, the Eastern Business Teachers Asa sociation convention in New York, N.Y., on "Achieving Excellence in; the Teaching of Shorthand" and' ; also spoke -at Woman's College of, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, N.C., on "Improved Business Communications: More' than a Hot Rod in Business." "Superbly Cast Production" —Daily Collegian Anton Chekhov's THREE SISTERS WEEKENDS through MAY 20 —at— CENTER STAGE e For Reservations Phone UN 5-2563 A Players Production THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA PAINT YOUR WAGON, another of the Penn State Players' pro ductions is in its beginning stages. Here is a sneak preview of what is in store, with the chorus rehearsing a scene from the Can Can number. The girls are, from the left, Barb Binzen, Susan Brown, Pat Leßoy and Sue Robertson. Alum Fund Provides Scholarships, Gifts ate School have already con tributed $2,000 towards this fund, he said. The Alumni Fund has also de veloped a Special Gifts Fund for alumni who give $ . lOO or more annually, and' some 500 alumni have entered the program, Leh man said, Contributors to the Alumni Fund may designate a specific use for their gift, but many do not and this money can be used where it is needed most, Lehman said. Promotion Staff Meeting OLD AND NEW MEMBERS Thursday, April 20 Accounts for Spring Carnival and Spring Week • ASK ABOUT OUR $25 SAVINGS BOND PROFIT SHARING PLAN • I • Z Make RESERVATIONS Now 5 A. for O v 3 z BOARD & ROOM 112 ..4 4 at 0 X C 11) 70 1-.. ir MARILYN HALL 401,2 ON VI a. 317 E. Beaver Ave. 3:. o <. for , O Z _. SUMMER & FALL SEMESTERS ' 5l , 0 Advantages Worth Considering ... z o Li • Clean, pleasant rooms xi -u IA 0 C. 4 0 Family-style meals -n tei. :-.1 re (no standing in line) vl = x 0 • Rates start at $216 for Summer Semester P 1.. 70 n 0 • Convenient to town and campus " Z 0 a 2 4 • For your leisure-hours---5 channel television -a bC 5 vsz 4 A few vacancies now . . . Ask for Mrs. Petriskey I 0 • ASK ABOUT OUR $25 SAVINGS BOND PROFIT SHARING PLAN •. ISA Directors Approve Proposal For Constitution The Independent Student As sociation board of directors ap proved a basic constitution pro posal Monday night. A previous constitution pro posed by the committee had not been approved by the board be cause of its self-sustaining mem bership clause. The previous pro posal had called for a screening of new members by the board of directors. Several of the members thought that such a clause could enable one group to gain control of ISA. The approved proposal which was submitted by Philip Haines, Town Independent Men president, will now go to the ISA constitu tion committee for further revi sion, The new proposal calls for a division of the body of the organ ization into a decision making group and interested independent students. The decision making body would consist of ten members elected in campus-wide elections at the same time as SGA elections. The members of this board would hold office for one year. The other members would be those undergraduate independ ent students , who wish to partici pate in the planning of independ ent social functions, The constitution committee and any other interested persons will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday in the ISA office to consider the .new propo sal. "We would like to submit a con stitution to the Senate sub-com mittee this year," Barry Rein, ISA president said. Most chemical elements are met als. Only 20 of the 102 identified elements are definitely nonmetal lic. MII:II=CE1:1:1:1:1:1:1 - - . . : 91. 1 0/14144 " (9 S. PTHERT,r4 SST /1" DAYS 11C1P0.11'.1 to 9 P All P 0/9/ SUNDAYS 12 TO 9 P TAXI RETURN GRATIS Be There! PAGE FIVE 7:00
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers