Today's Weather: Snow Flurries VOL. 56. No. 81 New Tapping System Presented to Council The new system for tapping men for hat society mem bership was formally presented to the Hat Society Council ist night by Donald Reidenbaugh, council president. The system was passed by the Council on Nov. 1, upon a recommendation by Skull and Bones, senior society. Dates Set For Spring Elections Th e All-University elections will be held on March 21 and 22 it was decided last night by the Elections Committee. The dates are Wednesday and Thursday of the last week before Spring vacation and fall on the days just before "the IFC-Panhel Ball big weekend. Another set of dates which was considered by the Committee was April 11 and 12, but the Commit tee generally agreed that it would be better for the elections to be completed before the vacation break. Committee Chairman Roger Beidler said he felt that the break definitely. was bad for student in terest in the elections. He said he thought continuity of the clique meetings and campaigning should be followed directly by the elec tions and if the routine was inter rupted the student body might lose interest in the campaign. Allows for Adjustment Another advantage to 'the earlier elections which was brought out by Gordon - Pogal was that it would give the newly elected officers more time to get adiusted to their new duties—especially the persons elected to Cabinet posts. Beidler also announced that the newly elected All-University President will be an independent. and the vice president and the secretary-treasurer will be frater nity members. The senior class president will also' be an independent and the Senior dais vice president will be a, fraternity member, while the junior class president will be a fraternity member and the vice president will be an independent. Friday Meeting These arrangements were made last Friday at a meeting between Beidler and the clique chairman of the two parties, Thomas Dye-Lion and Tack Abele-Campus. Dye since has been repladed by Robert Spadaro. The distribution of offices be tween fraternity and independent (Continued on page eight) 2 Seniors - Involved In. Auto Collision Damage estimated at $165 re sulted when cars driven by two students collided at 4:30 p.m. Sat urday at Sunset road and Ridge avenue. Drivers of the cars were Milton Scherpf, senior in dairy science from near Lititz, - "a n d Francis Yonker, senior in electrical en gineering from State College. Police' said the accident occur red when both cars' reached the intersection at the same time. There is no stop sign at the inter section, they said. Damage to the Scherpf vehicle was, estimated at $75, and The Yonker auto at $9O. • . . Snow Flurries, Clouds • Predicted, for:Todoit Snow flurries, inoderate cloudi ness, and somewhat warmer wea ther is -the . prediction, for today, according - to the students in the department, of .meteoitlogy. The expected high is 35 to 40 degrees with a low of 15 to .20. The high today. was 38 and the 10w was 23. . oi. tlr ais I. l 3 ttt frt g *- GU ~.6 By PAT HUNTER The need for a new method of membership selection was first discussed during Student En campment. At that time a com mittee was appointed to investi gate the possibilities of a new selection system. Under the new system, men will fill out cards listing their name, address, extra-curricular activities, all-University average, and preference of society, if any. The cards will be placed in four separate files according to the class of the applicant. Filing is Continuous The filing system will be con tinuous regardless of whether the applicant is tapped or not. If he is not tapped in his junior year, the card will be moved up to the senior file making him eligible for a senior society the following fall. The only requirement is that the applicant add his activities as he acquires them. At the time of tapping, the presidents of each hat society - will remove the cards from the file that contains his society's prefer ence list. These names will then be presented to the members of his society and they skall tap ac cording to their respective con stitutions. Plan Replaces Applications This method was presented by Skull and Bones to replace a sys tem which involved :no honor since the applicants had to ask to become members. Too many men sit down at their typewriters the night before the applications are due, and tell the societies what great guys they are, just for the sake of " a hat, Reidenbaugh said. Also, under the old system many men failed to apply because they felt.unworthy. System Maintains Prestige The new system will help to revive the justification of hat so cieties, Reidenbaugh explained, and it will maintain the prestige of a service as well as an honor ary society.- Filing cards for the new sys, tem will be available March 1, at the Hetzel Union desk. 5 O'Clock Theater To:Present Comedy 'The Devil and Donny Metzger,' a comedy by- Phillip Wein, senior in 'arts , and letters, will be pre sented today in the basement of Old Main by the 5 O'clock Thea ter. The show will be directed by Walter Vail, graduate student in dramatics - frord Upper Darby. Plays will be presented by the theater every 'Tuesday this semes ter. 2 Lawyers Summone4l WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (iP) —Two oil company lawyers Who figured in the offer of a $2500 contribution to Sen. Francis M. Case (R.-SD) dur ing the Senate scrap over the natural gas' bill were summoned today to testify before a federal grand jury. The attorneys are Elmer Patnian and John M. Neff. They'represent the - Superior Oil Co. of California. The grand jury is to hear them to morrow. Case rejected the $2500. Patman has told. Senate investigators he turned over the money, from per- Sonal funds of Harold B. Keck, Su perior Oil Co": president, to Neff to be donated' to. Case's : re-election campaign fund.: Neff has testified he passed tbi FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 14. 1956 IFC Board Asks Probation,ssoFine For Pi Kappa Phi The Interfraternity Council Board of Control recommended last night that Pi Kap pa Phi fraternity be placed on Board of Control probation and fined $5O for its part in an orientation week fraternity prank. The board recommended that the probation begin Saturday night And end April 28. Robert Simmons, Board of Control chairman, told IFC that Article HI, Section 3, of the IFC social code implies that a fraternity and its officers shall be primarily responsible for the good conduct of its members. Fire Teams Will Inspect Business Area Eight volunteer fire teams from the Alpha Fire Company will be gin an inspection of the State Col lege business area as part of a borough-wide check for possible fire hazards. Fire Chief Tom Sauers said working conditions and inconven ience were probable reasons for the delay of the investigation pre viously scht.duled to begin last Saturday. Plans call for the inspection of business areas for a "week - or so," and to fraternities and private homes in that order, according to . Salters. Sauers said he could give no date for the completion of the investigation. He stressed that the firemen were only volunteers and that their time is limited. Sauers said that the firemen will especially search for warm ashes loaded in • non-metal con tainers and placed near inflam mable partitions. Sauers said owners will be asked to fill out questionnaires presented by the firemen. Bridges to Talk At GOP Dinner . Republican Senator Styles S. Bridges of New Hampshire will speak on "The Republican Party in the Future" at the Lincoln Day dinner at 6:30 tonight in the Nit tany Lion Inn. The Young Republicans Club, in conjunction with the- Centre County Young Republicans Club, have sold 300 tickets for the din ner. Othgr Lincoln Day speakers in previous years have been Arthur Flemming, defense mobilizer; Senator William Knowland (R- Calif.), and Harold Stassen, spe cial assistant to the president in charge of disarmament. money on to Business Manager E. J. Kehler of the Sioux Falls, S.D., Daily Argus-Leader for relay to Case. Both Patman and Neff swore n. strings were attached. Now they and probably other witnesses will be called on to re peat to the giand jury here, start ing at 10 a.m: tomorrow, the story they already have related to a special Senate investigating com mittee. Winds Up Hearings The committee wound up its own hearings, at least for now, With-Neff testifying today that the $2500 Case rejected was the only contribution he made to any sena tor.- Charles W. Steadman, the com mittee counsel, said the commit tee knows of no other such contri butions by Neff, ,or' anyone else, related to the gas bill. _ Maneuvers were under way, This was the standard Nitta the board considered when passing the penalty. The incident started between se mesters when four members of Pi Kappa Phi removed three pieces of furniture from Phi Kappa Tau fraternity. The men were found guilty of disorderly conduct and fined $61.50 apiece by Justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills. The subcom mittee of the Senate Committee on Student Affairs placed the stu dents on disciplinary probation. Dean's Office to Act . The board's recommendation will go to the dean of men's office where it will be acted upon. If approved, Pi Kappa Phi will be under intensified Board of Con trol observation. Any violation of IFC rules by the fraternity dur ing probation will be considered in conjunction with the previous incident and dealt with accord ingly, Simmons said. Making a general statement concerning this type of fraternity prank, the board said it' will "con sider and act upon any violation of the IFC codes or any action which is detrimental to the good name ,of the University." Tickets for the IFC-Panhel Ball, March 23, will go on sale Feb. 27, John Russell, IFC vice president, announced last night. Sales to be Limited Russell said the first two days of sales will be limited to frat ernities only. He said the closed sale was decided upon to make the dance "a more fraternity af fair." Only 1000 tickets will be sold, he said, but houses may bring checks to the Feb. 27 IFC meeting for as many tickets as they wish to buy. Price of the tickets is $5.00. Corsages Discouraged IFC also . voted to' discourage corsages at the dance. The action was taken since members felt it would lighten the financial load of the .weekend. Houston Elam, chairman of the IFC future housing committee, told the group that the University . Board of 'Trustees will, discuss the need for' fraternity building_ land at its March meeting. The committee had looked into the problem of land availability, Elam said, and found there was (Continued on page eight) in Gas Probe nevertheless, to broaden the hunt for any possible additional dona tions, with signs of a rivalry shap ing up between two Senate com mittees. A possibly expanded in quiry might go back as far as the 1952 and 1954 political campaigns in search of any efforts to influ ence senators. President Dwight D. Eisenhower was reported to have discussed the bill with his Cabinet today. No: Decision Reached However, Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said t'no" when asked whether any decision had been reached to'sign or veto it. The _bill would exempt produ cers of natural gas from direct federal price controls. The big ar gument in Senate debate were ov er what effect this would have on consumers' gas bills, and whe ther the bill meant a big windfall for oil companiet and other gas producers. Ed Majors' 8-Week Plight Soo Page 4 House Repairs To Delta Sig Are Continuing Repairs of the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity house which was gut ted by fire the morning of Dec. 11 are proceeding ahead of sched ule. • Irving Boerlin, - advisor to the fraternity, said last night that he is sure repairs will be completed by the deadline of April 1. Sprinkler systems have been installed at strategic points in the house to help prevent any repe tition of the fire which caused be tween $40,000 and $50,000 dainage. Some of the sprinklers, which are concealed behind newly-placed plaster, are located in the base ment and the upstairs clubroom. Boerlin said the sprinkler sys tem was probably the first to be installed in any fraternity at the University. He expects the water system to be installed this week. Work is also progressing on complete plastering of the house and in stallation of the wiring systems. The first and third floors have been completely wired, Boerlin said, leaving about one-third of the fraternity 'to be rewired. Repair work is being done by the firm of Vernon J. Dietz, State College general contractor, who was let a contract of $55,000 early _ in January. Dietz said then that the frater nity, located at Locust Lane and Fairmount avenue, would be al , most a new structure and would be "safer and better" when re pairs were completed. • Victim Improving From Cabin Blaze . Eric Proudfoot, sophomore in arts - and letters from Oil City,,has been reported as improving from second-degree burns to the face and third-degree hurns to the hands in the Vermont blaze, Feb. 6. Proudfoot, whose burns required skin grafts, -is expected to be in the Brightlook Hospital, St. Johns bury, Vt., for at least five weeks. Theodore Miller, a sophomore in agricultural education from Wash ington, Pa., a victim of the fire who returned to the University, said yesterday that Proudfoot's face and hands are still bandaged. Eng Council to Discuss Final Exam Exemptions, Byron Smith, senior in electri cal engineering from Hollidays burg, will discuss exempting sen iors from final examinations at a meeting of Engineering Student Council tonight in 214 Hetzel Union. Law Dean to Speak Ralph E. Khkras, dean of the Law School of Syracuse Univer sity, will speak at a meeting for students- who are interested in attending law. school at 7:30 to night in 203 Willard. The meet ing is sponsored by Pi Lambda Sigma, pre-law honorary society. GMEKG