FRIDAY, MAY..I2, 4W • ••••. . • ''',O*ITI4.47 f r&WHATAN 7 BY;START!NG . I I4I .1142 *E S PON S I BLE)WI4IS PERI NG "CAM PA IG Old Mania This little story is for the bene- At of all graduating seniors who think that this six weeks is the last six weeks they'll be spending in State 'College. Sally Kunzler Seams, Theta Phi Alpha alum, and her hu.sbarid, Ben Seams, are now living in Le?nont while Ben is working for the College. All of which . goes to show that we can't tell where we'll end up: We know a few seniors whO are all set for a street• corner; a.', pair of dark glasses, and an assortment of pen cils. STRICTLY•SOCIAL . . The Beta Sigs are planning a big time this week with a whopper of a cabin party , set for Saturday. Those floating around will be Sandy italsky and Lynn Lunetz • . Sy Barash and SDT Flo Mar-, cUs . . . Lou Ullman and Julia Aaronson . . . Marty - Sadock and Sally Balthasar . . . Bob Kranich and AEPhi Phyllis Berney . Hal Bernstein and SDT Nina Rabino- Witz . . . Mary Pressman and Mar ion Papemick . . Art Goldberg and Mim Rubin . . Herb Hollen berg and stelle Roth . • . Jerry Kruger and Dee Portnay . . Bob Lyons and AEPhi. Sylvia - .Bergen . . . Lee Edelstein and Ruth Rosen baum, AEPhi. • Theta''Dorrie Campbell and Al pha Chi .Sig alum Tom Guipivan join together in saying "Phooey!" to the nasty. ole .Collegian column ist 'of a few semesters ago who gave .their little. rpmance one week —Dorrie is now wearing a dia 7 , o . mnd. ' • AEPhi Marilyn Schultz who is now a student at Skidmore is• Wearing a ring given her •by Offi cer Candidate Dick Berk, former Phi Sig . . .• ChiO Mrs. Carole Peyton will be visiting for ten days her husband, Ensign George Pey ton, Delta Chi alum, who is sta tioned at Miami Beach . . . AOPi Bobby Longnecker Briner and her husband, Air Cadet Bill Briner, former Delta Chi, were visiting State College last weekend. June First is wearing the PiKA Pin of Don Knoll who is stationed at Bucknell in the V-12 unit . . . Lois. Lunn, ChiO; is engaged to Bob • Cowan, them eng graduate student . . . • Theta Phi Alpha • alums Jane . Skelly 'Callahan and Mary Shehee Were . in -State .College last week .. 'ditto .for' Theta. :alum. Anne CaruthtvgaStiokles.who -is .still.tere By RITA M. BELFONTI gavel pounder and frosh fright ener, is engaged to Lew Nicholas, Phi Kappa Sig in the air corps, who is coming . to town this week end . . . SDT Shirley Levine is making a little trip to see Gamma Sig Milt Feldman before long : . . Alpha z deli Marcia Jones and Sigma Chi Dick r. Reynolds • recently middle 2aisled it . . Theta Betsy Edwards will be married to Navy man Bob Dunn in June . . . SDT Ruth Freed will be out of town visiting Kappa Nu Bobby . Kollen . . ChiO Lois Millei swells the ranks of the engaged• with -her re cent engagement to Alpha Chi •Sig John Brittain . . . Alpha Chi 0 Kassy Kocher is pinned to SAE Joe Krug . . . Chio Grace Samp son is wearing the Sigma .Nu •pin of Jimmy• Etters (the ChiO's are really making out) . . . • FINALE . . . Before Ave finish we'd like to clear up (or at least try) the little campus mystery concerning a cer tain honorary for the MOST out standing senior men. We dunno. We always figured that the All- College president was kinda out standing. Or maybe members of the secret ,committee with their secret votes cast in a secret man ner don't seem to agree with us. Everyone wishes that someone would - venture to explain. It makes life so confusing. . • Interfaith Council Meets . "Religions of the -Reformation Period" will; be the topic at the second in a series of comparative religious discussions sponsored by the Student Interfaith Council in 304 Old Main at 8 o'clock Tues day evening. Student hike leaves the foun dation Saturday afternoon. 2:30 Why not bring your mother to the Student Department, Sun day morning, 9:30? Student department from Hil. lel foundation will conduct the Westminster Fellowship Forum is iha:Firesida•Room. Sunday (4sToning.•#:2o.• IL; -1! • 1 0 -'1 • -1;1 THE COLLEGIAII CAMPUS* CALENDAII ;- -7rimitty Regular. weekly-services, Hillel rouridation, 7:30 gm. " Tomorrow Blossom Time Ball, White Hall. PSCA Cabinet meeting, 304 Old Main, 1 p.m. Westminster Foundation student hike to PSCA Lodge, Foundation, 2:30 p.m. Sunday Chapel services, auditorium, 11 a.m. Enlisted men's movie, 121 Sparks, 1:45 p.m. Open house for civilian and en listed personnel, Old Main, 2 to 5 p.m. Wesley Foundation 'Friendly Hour, Foundation, 5 p.m. Baptist Youth Fellowship supper and discussion, University Baptist Church, 5:30 p.m. Hillel and Westminster Fellow ship Group, Fireside Room, West- Minster Foundation, 6:20 p.m. Penn State Bible Fellowship discussion,. "Present-Day World Events in •the Light of the Bible," 405_ Old . . _ . . . . . ,•' • .. •Monday - - Junier Service* . Board meeting, Atherton lounge, '6:15 p.m. ' • Freshman Foruni officer meet ing; 304 Old Main, '1:30 p.m. • -, Freshman Men's Cabinet Coun cil,-304 Old Main, 6:30 p.m. • Cwensi WRA Room; White Hall, 8 p.m. ' Tuesday PSCA Board of Directors, 304 Old Main, 4:15 p.m. Tennis Club, courts, 7 p.m. Free movies, "Grand Illusion," 121 Sparks, 7 p.m. Interfaith meeting, panel dis cussion, 304 Old Main, 8 p.m. Wednesday All-College Forum, .pinel dis cussion, 304 Old Main, 4:15 p.m. Alpha Lanibda Delta pledging ceremony, Southeast A t her t on Lounge, 7 p.m. The Forestry Society will meet in 105 Forestry. at 7:30 •p.m. There will be a showing of Icodachrome pictures on bird life. lie public is invited. Thursday Classical Music Hour, 304 Old Main, 4:30 p.m. Atherton News Review, south east lounge Atherton, 5:20 p.m. Hefzel Meets Officials President Ralph D. Hetiel was recently host of a luncheon meet ing at the Nittany Lion lim for officials of the Pennsylvania War Fund. The purpose of the meeting was to make preliminary plans for the ' War Fund Campaign in early Fall. Guests of the luncheon includ ed Ralph E. Weeks of Scranton, state chairman of the campaign; Wilber F. Maxwell of Scranton, state executive director; S. D. Furst of Williamsport,' associate state chairman of area D; S. K. Williams of Clearfield, chairman of district 4; Evan B. Lloyd, dir ector of area A; and Russel E. Clark, chairman of Centre Colin.; ty. President Hetzel is associate state chairman of area A, in charge, of districts 1 and 4.. FORDHAM .UNIVERSITY SCHOOL. OF LAW NEW YORK Three-Year Day Course Four-Year Evening Course CO-EDUCATIONAL Member Assn. of American Law Schools Under Accelerated Plan, Day Course may be completed in two years; Evening Course in two years and eight months. DAY and EVENING CLASSES FIRST YEAR CLASSES BEGIN On June 12th and Sept. 25th, 1944, and February sth, 1945. For further information address Registrar, Fordham University School of Law • 302 Broadway. •, Ifow.York 7, ILY, Pam Statements It occurred to us that with just two more weeks left to speak out and then forever hold our peace it might be a good idea to take a look around campus and comment finally on this and that and things that,seem to be arousing a great deal of interest right now. First on our little list is the Penn State Engineer. This little magazine existed in the time of the great Froth, budding Portfolio, and The Daily Collegian. Unlike any of the others it has grown in prestige in spite of war conditions until today it is the best college engineering magazine in the coun try. Its circulation has been tripled at the very least, and not a small part of all this credit can be thrown in Walt Berg's direction. Walt Berg, as business manager, has done a bang-up job 'on pubi licity, a job that has seldOm - been duplicated on this 'campus. Unlike the patent medicine ads, each bit - of • publicity , has •been juitlfied 'the issues. The covers'ofthe Eiigi •neer. alone: have iiribirri success. - second••only •to Froth ri'sqtie ones of old. The Penn State Engineer, in short,•has-arrived. And - Furthermore -; .Right on the tail of. the Engineer comes the now notorious honorary situation at present. It would seem that those one would expect to be BMOC's are not such things and in their •place are . some probably very nice little people whose habi tat from all respects would seem to be Old Main. Say what you will about the situation, then, there is just a little we would like to add. First, we can remember the day when out standing work on publications, ac tivities, etc., was recognized and said parties were given their just due. Now, without stretching the imagination a single bit or even hesitating a minute to think it over, it is possible to list several deserving persons who lost out 'be cause of reasons vague in: every one's minds. And thid strikes us as particularly ironical because just the other day someone said, "Well, one thing, politics aren't as filthy now as they used to be." Bitter, Bitter, Bitter - - - Right about here it might be en couraging to a tired campus body to announce to all that Max "Bare foot Boy with Cheek" Shulman has accumulated pages of bitter ness once again and this time en titled his epic "The Feather Mer chants." In case this bothers you, feather merchants is the GI nick name for civilians. Shulman, now a sergeant himself in the Army Air Corps, writes his own story .. . a sergeant, home from the peace and quiet of an army camp. thuilaveritelrand is-lheineve carry.- Cigars -'7'obocc9 Cigarettes - Magazines Newspapers - Pipes, r Grahanis,A. C. Ey'SERENE ROSENBERG At Last Place, Schwab Auditorium . Time, Thursday, June 22 . . . Hour, 3 p.m. . . ..and in case you, haven't already guessed it, that'w graduation data once and finally. Now try, just try to get a reserva tion in town ANYWHERE. (Sec- Collegian Classifieds. Plug!) Caught In the Act - They may look pretty, but if you value your bank account don't touch. That's the final bit of advice as•far as, the campus' "pretty flow ers" are concerned. From very re liable sources, we understand that there is a small matter of twenty five dollars attached to anyone found plucking the pretty bloc- soms. Hands off! And Now This The rough and rowdy West, al:- ways first with progressive meto pures,;hAs-rpajly '.§tarp,ed. so!ncithin4i thistime:".The • fettiihirie stAlerth, of Stanford University' 'have brice anal for 41I:ericled tpros . sgrority pro Maria Maria .cons out there.:Theie wtanc. have abolished sororities.. on . the basis of their being undemocratic. This is especially interesting since all radical . changes take root in the West. Also because the quota sys tem, now .being enforced by the College, usually precedes this more drastic step. Film Club Presents Famed Motion Picture "Grande Illusion," acclaimed to be the best movie produced any where in the world in 1938, wilt;. be shown in 121 Sparks at 7 and 9 , p.m. Tuesday evening. Admission; is This movie was produced in, France, under the direction of jatipp : Rerfifir, and stars Jean. Gabin, Pierre Fresnay, Dalio, Eric von Stroheim, . and Dita Pailo. The story is of French prisoners in a German prison camp during 4,V0t44.4 War L "Grande Illusion" is one of a series of movies sponsored by ilict International Film Club. SOrdilst in your"Bolllletl --We , mean"captured stardust!' or Roger&Gallet dry perfume. Just put • some of this -pow -dere& perfume between two thin layers •of cotton ancLac-.. twills/ tuck it in , your,bonnel i f.:- 5 :- - lei the cutest•surest wayueNte_4'ir4.: , your favorite. Roger & Gallet , sceut, ; ' . • withimu•all.the•time. Your hair will be fragrant with ... .captured stardust." Six exciting scents .-RO - GER GALLET -FAGS' FIVE•
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers