PAGE TWC Cabinet Proposes Opening Armory For Daily Recreation Plans are now being formulated to keep the Armory open every afternoon for recreational ptirposes, Cabinet Chairman Miriam Ramsey reported to the All-College Cabinet at a meet ing Tuesday evening. "Swing In" proved to be a surprising success last week end, according to Miss Ramsey, and every effort is being made to make it an all-week a ffair Michael Lynch revealed that students have not been cooperat ing fully in the blood &miring service. Many students signed up to give blood, but failed to take their physicals or to make the trip Tyrone. The State College chapter of the Red Cross has agreed to pay for all the expenses involved in the trios to Tyrone. Donations from five campus organizations have been returned. Ruth Constad, chairman of the ;Fttudent Post-War Planning Com mittee for the Liberal Arts School, presented five proposals for the re organization of the School of Lib eral Arts. Representatives at the 11;:eeting were supposed to take the suggestions back to their organi zations and report on them. In the most important ,appoint gent of the evening, Robert Glei chert was chosen to replace Ruth 1 1 2.auffman as chairman of the Elections committee. Trustees Approve ngineering Prof -Lawrence Perez, a graduate of :Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, was approved as associate profes sor of civil engineering at the Col lege at the annual meeting of the Eioard of Trustees recently. The new professor, who will as slaine his duties February 1, has held various positions in the en_ gineering field since his gradua tion from the Institute in 1929. • ' Hehas worked as a detailer with the Concrete Steel Company, as a consultant on materials with Still nian and VanSiclen, Inc., and most recently has been in business for hlinself in the firms of Brumfield and Perez and Service Steel Drum Company. - In addition, he has taught at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, Stevens Institute of Technology, Green Engineering Camp, and Manhattan• College. He obtained his master's degree from Brooklyn Ihstitute in 1941 and has done re search work on the "Photoelastic _Analysis of Stress in the Lap Plates of Fillet-Welded Joints." ._S ? • wittg at SWING INN it Will 'Prove To Be Your Popular FRIDAY Nite "Fun" Spot Sororities- (Continued from paw? one) Jeanne Robertson, and Lucy Self ing,. Alpha Xi Delta: Colors, navy blue and gold; pledges— Trina 'Boocock, Jean Brenner, Joan Charles, Mildred Chestnutt, Lynn Drake, Rachael Emerich, Betty Jane Flory, Margaret Fred erickson, Marianne Galley. Mary Gundel, Maria Louise Haw/.lik, Elvira Holmes, Nancy Killam, Sally Knapp, Jo Ann Kuehn, Lou Ann La Roche, Made lyn McCall, Winifred Miller. Madge Neely, Berry Ness, Ann Pearson, Mary Louise Perry, Jonelle Mae Phillips, Barbara Pic cone, Dorothy Smigelski, Helen Tershowska, Betty Trainer, Caro line Wilbur, Lucille Witmer, and Helen Zoll. Chi Omega: Colors, cardinal and straw: pledges— Kay Badollet, Jo Ann Beaver, Jo Ann Brennan, Gloria Colden stroth, Rebecca Gill, Elsie Hurl burl,, Claire Parks, Carol Preuss, Ruth ShOptaugh, Gloria Snyder, Jane Staus, 'and Helen Weber. Delta Gamma: Colors, bronze. pink and blue: pledges— Russelia • Adamitz, Rebecca Burke, Mary Ellen Daub, Frances Grier, Marjorie Keast, Lila . Ken nedy, Doris Kready, Susan Mc- Cauley, Marjorie McCormick, Patricia Morgan. Algie Moser, Giandy • Opperman, Virginia Pierson, Elizabeth Rank, Phyllis Reigle, Eloise Rile, Jo anne Rora beck, Anne Siebrect, Grace Tarno. Marybeth Trescher, Mary Lou Waygood, Gloria Wetzel, and Anti Wills. Gamma Phi Beta: Colors, mode and brown; pledges— Carolyn Currier, Marjorie Dun meyer, Virginia Gallop, Ruth Louise Lowe, Virginia McMusky, Lea Merrill, Helen Miller. Sue Romig, Kate Savige, Mar jorie Seybert, Lois Smith, Marlene Smith, Marion Stephens, Doris Strandburg, Virginia Tennyson, Lee Wagner, Lois Wyman. Kappa Alpha Theta: Colors, black and gold; pledges- 7 Mary Margaret Barnett, Joan Bissey, Joanne Canby, Virginia Dignan, Elizabeth Doyle, Anne Dunaway, Nan James, Mary Lou Armory Doors SWING Open at 8:00 Throughout the evening, Mary Barron will maintain a fortune telling booth. Dorothy . Lucas, Marie Rodamsky, and Harry Stu kan will serve cokes. ...Social chairmen for the affair are Edward Chappen and Kuzma Leschak. Imby Erik, Olga Gosz toni, and Helen Tyriw are han dling the dance's publicity‘. Dr. Fenn Will Address Sunday Chapel Service Dr. Don Frank Fenn, rector of the Church of St. 'Michael and All Angels in Baltimore, will speak at chapel Sunday. . • Dr. Fenn ; who is a prominent preacher of the Episcopal Church, is active in social work throUghout Baltimore and the state of Mary land. He came to Baltimore in 1931 after service in Colorado and Min nesota. The choir will feature a program of special music. McNelis, Jane Nute. Joyce Parker, Mary Kathryn Reinhard, Eleanor Roberts, Paul ine Schmitt, Nancy Sinclair, Jane Spicher; Eva Mae Winter, 'and Nar cissis Yant. Kappa Deltai Colors, green and white; pledges— Marguerite Ball, Meryl Brown, Rita Cota, Jane Dieterle, Joyce Eickhorn, Adele Ernst; Florence Glavin, Barbara Green, Mildred Hall, Ellen Hamilton. Betty Lou Irwin, Barbara Knoll, Betty Lindsay, Betsy Marshall, Lucille Martin, Shirley Matthews, Barbara Morrison, Jean Swartz, Nancy Swartz, and Shirley Thomp son. Kappa Kappa Gamma: Colors, light blue and dark blue; pledges— Virginia Babbitt, Joy Baldwin. Jane Beckel, Arloa Betts, Mary Louise Callahan, Freddy Dixon, Nancy Embick, Patricia Gibson (Continued on page five) for - - - DANCING CARDS PING PONG REFRESHMENTS WO 12:00 THE COLLEGLIaN Russian Club Plans Dance Russian Club is sponsoring an all-College ,informal vie-dance in the Armory, 8:30 p. m. to 12 midnight, February 3. Admis sion to this affair is 35 cents per person. During intermission, members of the club will perform Russian folk songs and dances. Nadia Lulka and Kathryn Tyriw will demonstrate the "Kamarinskaia," a dance native to Ukrania while 'rim Petroff and Helen Tershow ska will dance the Russian "Koz ackok Podilski." Two Russian melodies. ,t,'Dvie Geetaree" and "Bublitchki" will be sung by Ann Buganich. All entertainers will be dressed in fitting Russian costumes. 'lt Didn't Hurt A Bit' Say Returning Blood Donors Maulhe Named Head Of Red Cross HMI Richard Mauthe was elected chairman of the Operating Com mittee which is head of the cam- Pus unit of the American Red Cross, at its meeting this week. Ruth Bollinger and Jean Ford were elected vice chairmen, while Mary Margaret Dunlap. was made secretary and Ann Berkhimer, treasurer. Chairmen for the sub-commit tees have been chosen by the Operating Committee from the general student body. They are: Mary Catherine Bowman, can teen corps; Paul Pioth and Dor othy Morrow, chairman and vice chairman, respectively of first aid; Sara Pollard, home nursing; Judd Healy, motor corps; Jean ne Hirt, public information; June Daniels and, Patricia Enright, vice-chairman, staff assistance corps; and Betty Shenk and Walter Falkenburg, co-chairmen, war fund drive. Headquarters for the campus unit have been established at 402 Old Main. Portfolio Offers Prizes For Outstanding Essays A first prize of $7 and a second priZe of $3 are being offered in an essay contest sponsored by the English Literature department and "Portfolio,"! College literary maga zine. Essays submitted are to be an_ alyses of one of the poems from A. E. Housman's "A Shropshire Lad," and are to be based on rules and material as printed in the cur rent issue of "Portfolio.". Judges will be Professors A. Pauline Locklin, Mason Long. and William L. Werner of the English Literature department. All entries must be limited to Sop words and should be submitted to Student Union on or before February 17. Pictures for LaVie All seniors who have not been notified as to the time when they are to have their picture taken for LaVie are requested to notify Charlotte Taylor, Kappa Alpha Theta house, as soon as possible. The New— ILLUSTRATED.— MODERN LIBRARY One of the best book values ever published for gifts or for your own library. ALL TITLES $ 1 ! Each at KEELER'S • 4f Course - FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1945 By AUDREY FLYBACK Busloads of College students and State College residents came back from Tyrone Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday feeling just as well as when they left to give blood to the Red Cross: It .didn't hurt a bit, they agreed. • Upon • arriving at Tyrone the donors were ushered into the base_ ment of a church where nurses took blood tests, temperatures, and blood pressures. After these pre liminaries they entered the screen ed-off section of the room, where the blood was given. Here the nurses efficiently performed the operation.. Fifteen minutes later the patients were eating sand wiches and drinking hot coffee. Before leaving the church each donor received a sticker stating that he had given blood. Those who had donated for the first time received bronze pins. In addition to this, printed postal cards were given to those who wished - to dedi r .cate their pint of blood to a certain man in the service. . . The procedure .was _well organ ized, and most of the donors were back•iri State Collegehy.3:3o P.M:* The'only effects felt by 'the mOir:. it'y were drowsiness and . - a 'fere,: . , cious appetite: - • Hillel Plans 'Hasidism' Talk . by Rabbi Tepfer The Hillel Forum will have as its guest, speaker Rabbi John Tep fer, professor of Talmud and his tory at the Jewish Institute of Re,. ligion, New York, 3 p.m. Sunday. He will- discuss "Hasidism," a re markable mystic al movement which arose in the 18th century and won over half the Jewish masses. Its story is one of the most colorful in the history of re ligion. Rabbi Tepfer, a delightful plat form personality, is from England. A master of the entire Hasidic lit erature, he visited the existing communities of this sect in eastern Europe and Palestine where lie studied their customs at .first hand and was privileged to engage in intimate discusbion with their most eminent leaders.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers