SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER '22, 1962 Congress to Hear Bill On Spring Week Control A. bill proposing a meeting of representatives from groups who participated in last year's Spring Week will be presented to the Undergraduate Student Govern ment Congress Wednesday; Fred Good (fraternity) said last night. Good said he would present the proposal in accordance with a recommendation from the Inter fraternity Council Encampment held Tuesday. Under his proposal, the meeting `Would be held' Thursday in. the Hetzel Union building. The recom mendations from that meeting would then be presented to Ccfn vress, Good said. The object of the bill is to allow people who participate •in Spring Week to have a ,voice in deter mining policies concerning the event, Good said. ' . Another recommendation of the IFC Encampment concerned fra ternity scholarship policies. This proposal_ will be . presented to IFC Monday night. Under this recommendation, the probation requirement for a fra ternity will be either a 2.35 house average or 25 per cent of ' the members receiving below a 2.00 term average. The present • scholarship policy states that a fraternity term aver age must be .above the indepen dent men's - term average. This -recommendation also in cludes specific penalties to be im- Eiex Code-- (Continued frOm page one) ;prohibit candidates' a advertising fin' the mass communications me dia and. would require candidates Ito inform the 'Elections Commis sion of planned radio debates or ;press conferences. The proposed code will be sub mitted • to • the USG Congress ,Wednesday ; night. Visit NITTANY NEWS for l• Qualify Paperbacks • Latest Magazines o Hallmark Cards • Foreign-Books • German french Italian 'Spanish - Magazines and Newspapers Games of "60" • & Chess For Plain Friendly Service Come to the Store near Co-op Corner MTTANY NEWS 108 W. College Ave.' "Where•'Booha' is the .Byword", - THE DAILY ^ COLLEG posed upon a fraternity that 'fails to meet' the scholarship require. ment. Under the present policy the IFC scholarship committee can only recommend penalties. Also at the encampment. Philip Cozad ;(e.ki—Phi) was appointed rushing chairman for 1962-63. In the rushing workshop, it was recommended 'that the fraternity orientation program be continued. This program consisting of slides and a - ia4 was presented during summer counseling for the first 'time t q freshmen and their S par.- ents : Folio Wing the program parents were asked to kit out a Auestion naire Concerning fraternities and fraternity life. ,• Prof Represents Historians Ari lioogenboom, associate pro fessor of American history. rep resented the Pennsylvania His torical; Association at the 115th anniversary celebration of the University of Pittsburgh and the U.S. Constitution held recently at the University of Pittsburgh. NEED 'f1•JOB ? NEED A JOE ? NEED A JOB ? NEED A JOB ? PART TIME HELP NEEDED! FOR TELEPHONE' BUSINESS Require Service Representative. Tel4o, or Service Order Typing. Experiencet For more Information Call, Mr. Walck. Mgr.. AD 7-4911 Between 8:39 a.na. - 5 .p.m. Mon thrl Friday NEED A JOB ? NEED A JOB ? NEED A JOB ? NEED A JOB ? trZ awr it yc.:4 ppiAl '^"'4 The loading Cigarette Case is depot tool leaf pattern handsomely detailed on lovely cowhide; fashion colors. Mod? pinseal FRENCH PURSE .... $3.95• ItEGISTRAIMBILIFOID 45.95* "'CONTINENTAL" matt EYE GLASS CASE .. 42.95 CIGARETTE LIGHTER ........... F. KEY GARD .. G. (Not shown) CIGARETTE CASE:43.9S Marin to Lecture in Moscow Joseph Marin. head of the De partment of Engineering Mechan ics,. has been invited to give a series of lectures at the Academy of Sciences of the , Soviet Union in Moscow during the first three weeks in October. The lectures will concern the mechanics of creep ancLplastics of materials. As a guest of the Soviet Union, Marin will also visit educational institutions and laboratories dur ing his stay in Russia. His Russian visit is part of a six-month leave which begins Oct. I. MARIN HAS also been invited to present a series of lectures on mechanics at educational institu tions in Israel, India and Japan, following his stay in the Soviet Union. He plans to lecture at the Israel Institute of Technology at Haifa. the' Indian institute ,of Science at Bangalore and the Uni versity of Osltka in Japan: The professor has included sev eral other countries in Europe, and Asia in his itinerary. Marin will devote the remainder of his leave to research in ma terial science as it relates to solid state mechanics: His research is sponsored by the National Science Foundation, U.S. Army Research Office and the Allegheny Batlis PRINCESS GARDNER. i - • 42.94• tics Laboratory of the Hercules Powder Compare•. A member of the University faculty since 1942, Marin became head of the Department of Engi neering Mechanics in 1952. Before coming to Penn State, he taught at the University of Illinois, Rut gers , University and the Illinois Institute of Technology. Ict 1949 Mann was the winner o f 'the George, Westinghouse Award of - the American Society for Engineering Education. He has conducted about 50 sponsored re- •plus tax 011 ' with Mttgiviran ANOTHER YEAR, ANOTHER DOLLAR With today's entry I begin my ninth year of writing columns in your isehool newspaper for the makers of Marlboro Cigarette*. Niniyears, I believe you will agree; is a long time. In fact, it took only a little longer than nine years to dig the Sues Canal, and you know what a gigantic undertakidk that west To be sure, the work would have gone more rapidly had the shovel been invented at that time, but, as we all know, the: shovel was•not invented until 1946 by Walter It. Shover of Cleveland, Ohio: Before Mr. Shovel's discovery in 1940 ; all digging was done with sugar tongs—a method unquestionably dainty but hardly what one would call rapid. There were, natu• raUy, many efforts made to speed up digging before Mr. Shovel's breakthrough—notably an attempt in 1912 by the . immortal Thomas Alva Edison to dig with the phonograph, but the only thing that happened was that he got his horn full of mild. This so depressed Mr. Edison that he fell into- a fit of melancholy from which he did not emerge until . two year► later when his friend William Wordsworth, the eminent nature poet, cheered him np by imitating a duck for four and a halt hours. • But I digrest._-For nine years, I say, I have been writing this column for the makers of Nfarlboror Cigarettes, and for nine yema' they have been paying me money. You are shocked. You think that anyone who he tmied Maribom'a Unparalleled flavor, who has enjoyed _Marlboro's ,filter, who has revelled in lidariboro's jolly red and white pack qr box should be more thin willing to write about Marlboro without a penny's romper's*. lion. You are wrong. Compensation is the very foundation stone of Ilse American Way of Fife. Whether you love your. v.ork or hate. it, ottl s3rstent absolutely requires that you be 1)441 for it. For esitimple, I hives friend named Rex Glebe, a Veterinarian by pmferisicm, Who simply adores to worm dogs, II mean you can call him up and say, "Hey, Rex, let's go ',owl a few lines," or "Iley,,ltex, let's go flatten some pennies on the railroad tracks," and he 'will always reply, "No, thanks. better stay 7 here in:•case somebody Want* a dog wormed." I: mean there 41 not one thing, in„the wfwle world you can 'intits that Rex likes better !thou , worming a dog. Hut even so,: Rex Always mends a bill fur worm ing your dog because in his wisdom he knowe that, it, do tither wine lipoid be to rend, possibly irreparably,_ dui fabric of democracy. • t. 1 ; • .• 0 ,, /, It's the same with me Slid Marlboro CiKarettee. I think Marlboro's flavor represents the pinnacle, of the tobacconist's art. I think Marlboro's filter repmeents the pinnacle of the filter-maker's art. I think Marlboro's pack and box represent the pinnacle of the paekager's art. I think Marlboro is s'pleas. we sods treasure, and I fairly burst with pride that I have been chosen to speak for Marlboro on-your campus. AU the same, I. want my money every Week. And the makers- of Maribortiunderstand this full well. They'don't like it, but they understauxt it. In the columns which follow this opening installment, I will turn the hot white light of truth on the pressing problems of campus .life—the many and varied dilemmas Which hoot the undergraduate—burning quiwtions like "Should Chaucer clam rooms be converted to parking garages?" and "Should proctors be given &saliva test?" and("Should foreign exchange students be held for ransom?" • And in these column, lv)iile grappling with the crisoot that Vex campus America, I will make occasional brief mentiom of Marlboro Cigarettes. If I do not, the makers will not give me any money. • me rho makers of Marlboro" will bring you this uncensored, froo-atg/o column Zi flouts throughout the school year. Our ins this period it le not unlikely that Old Max tofu step on wane toes—principally ours—but toe think lt's an In fun and we hope you tittl too. search projects and is the author of about 150 technical papers and six hooks on materials and stress analysis. MARIN received his bachelor Of arts and bachelor of science de• grees from the University of Brit• ish Columbia. He earned his mas ter's degree at the University of Illinois and his doctor of philoso. phy degree at the University of Michigan. BEAT NAVY of "I Was a Tarn-age Dwarf," "Ms Many Loves of Debit Gillis," etc.) PAGE FIFTEEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers