PAGE FOUR Sorority Aorta ALPHA CHI OMEGA will initi ate 20 pledges on Sunday. Inititia tion will be followed by a formal banquet at the State College Hotel. ALPHA EPSILON PHI actives and pledges will entertain Phi Sigma Delta on Sunday at an in formal party. ALPHA OMICRON PI pledges will hold a tea for other sorority pledges last Saturday. Pledges also entertained the actives at the annual "Goat Party" last Monday. ALPHA XI DELTA: Tomorrow afternoon, the chapter will initiate 28 pledges. After initiation, there will be a banouet at the State Col lege Hotel. Mrs. R. H. Olmstead is guest speaker. A formal dance in honor of the initiates will be held at the Nittan•y Lion Inn tomorrow night. CHI OMEGA: Dr. Florence Sei bert, who won Chi Omega's Na tional Achievement Award in Medicine, will address chapter „mem.bers next Monday night. DELTA GAMMA: Two officers from each of the following chap_ ters will be delegates at a confer , ence here this weekend: Car negie Tech; Getysburg and Goucher Colleges; American and - ; Duke Universities; and.Univ.ersity, • of West Virdinia. Miss Jane Cowell of State College, .province secre tary, will preside at the meeting's. T - GAMMA PHI BETA will enter-, istain wives of ex servicemen who I are .now at the College at tea, on Sunday. KAPPA ALPHA . THETA: "What tan tx-G-I Expects When He Gets -Back'.' will be discussed next Mon- May after chanter meeting by Har .pld 'Griffiths, an ex-Serviceman. A ]liking party will be held on Sun , • day. for , Theta actives. KAPPA DELTA pledges enter stained other sorority pledges at .tea last Sunday. PHI MU recently pledged: Mrs. (Charles Peters, patroness Lynn ;Clark, 'Barbara 'Carter, Mary Ann Cree, Eleanor Fehnel, and Jean Wunderly. Pledges held a tea last Saturday for pledges from other sororities. Tomorrow night pledges will entertain actives at an over night party. .• SIGMA DELTA TAU • pledges presented a .review for the: actives last Sunday. Plans for an alumnae weekend include a weiner roast to morow afte'rnoon. and 'dinenr • 'at the State College Hotel tomorrow night, after which the group will attend the PlaYers' ••-pro cludion of "Brother Rat." fprmal meeting and party in Ath erton Hall on Sunday will close festivities. THETA. PHI ALPHA , recently initiated: Alice 'Malarkey, Marie Raymond, Ann •Bergan,Jplia Pas tewka, Van Angelillo; Constant Miceli, Beatrice' Shaw, Kathleen Sheffer, Ann Uhrik, and Yolanda West. ZETA TAU ALPHA elected the following officers this week: Con spance Walters, presid,ent; Cather-, iiie Stahl, vice-president; Gladys Stanhope, secretary; and Dorothy Wickham, treasurer: In honor of Ntiss Elsie Kresge, a State College aitimna who, will' soon report for dtity with the. American Red Cross, actives will hold. a party tonight. The chapter will entertain ASTP members at an informal party on Sunday. , • THE • WESLEY FOUNDATION of the Methodist Church • SUNDAY, APRIL 15 256 E. College Ave. 9:30 a. m.— Student Church School 10:45 a. m.— Morning Worship Service 5:00-7:00 p.• m.— ...• • Student Friendly Hours At • Hort Woods • Fun, Fellowship, SuOper, , , • . yespers 'Speaker--Dr,. Pearl, „Wlesi,oq: :-POIP4e And A;Trieni _ WSGA Elects Frosh To Custom's Board; . Presents Awards Six new members were elected to Freshmen Customs Board by WSGA. Freshmen who will hear cases of next semester's frosh of fenders are Genelle Phillips, Janet Molin'auer, Suzanne Romig, Mar jorie McCall,•Violet Gillespie, and Marilyn Schaub. WSGA voted to award $25 schol: arships to women maintaining the highest averages after two semes ters of the freshman year. Recipi ents of these scholarships 'are Dorothea Fischer, Sara Masuroy sky, Lynn Robinson, and Adele Thompson. A nominating committee for coming WSGA elections was ap pointed. The committee will be headed by Ann Louise Decker and Betty Robinson, and Doris Funk will represent Senate. Faculty representatives are Miss Charlotte E. Ray and Miss Helen G. Swen son. Ann Reese, Phyllis James, and a Judicial representative will com pose a committee to investigate the possibility of having examina tions; for freshmen women before the removal of customs. Betty Robinson, Judicial head, announced that WSGA rules con cerning riding in cars will be em-_ phaSized. The rules state that co eds.,must sign out to ride in a car acid must have the permission of the ~hostess to go outside of the borough limits. Oteron Nu To Aid In areer Planning .Omicron Nu, home economics honorary, will sponsor "Career Day" in the Home Economics Building frdm 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., Wednesday as an aid to stuaents in choosing their careers. .Any student of the College will he -givpri the opportunity to have a,.half:4lour conference with the• couilSelor of his choice. Students are urged to make,an appointment in thOront hall of the Home Edo liorilics Building Monday. A .coffee hour will .be held ,•in northeast lounge or Atherton.Hali froth 1:80 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday In-honor of these women. All fac ulty and students are invited to attend; . . Try .Your Astrology AT THE . - . .. T FORMAL . . . .. 4 4 , -(A SI fli Soft Lights and, the `tt. ? ~,. \, s ai f +' t i -' 6 -. \\ C l l4 --.#; - Sweet Music of • Elrose L. Anion and his A" ----- ' l t...g ; ' Musical Savants ' f i rr.„;. f t ( . ts . ~ , ,..(...... .5 ,..71... I\ .- ' ...-4 ,A- • Rec Hall f• -( 7 --- ,j -,--,44,,. 41 ' PDlaattele! - --- April 14th 1 ~ • ..","(;<,f--7t,,',11. 3 . Time - ;-.- -- 9 ,to 12 , ..-- Tickets are on sale at Student Union and' at the door -- -60 c per person - . - ..... : SPONSORED BY THE . -: :. . •.. . _ .. . .. . ... ... . J ‘. . ..,.. - ^ , -- v a.r .Z 1 . ..: ' 4 , , i t l 1W 7 ;...*, : , C. • t . , • ,-.... , 'A . ej, 1) ,• . . . •- '. ' (i i' s •:. 't:•.•; 1 7 ' • ' 4 . ? :-.; :; 1 .'. , • . 1 ' • !... I.'. „ . ,_ ...,__ w. I) . 4 Tyson To Judge Oratorical Finals Prof. Raymond. W. Tyson of th 4 speech department will be one of the three judges for the national finals of the Hearst Oratorical Contest to be held in New Yo - rk April 23. Eight hundred colleges and high schools will participate in the con test, sponsored by the Hearst newspaper chain. Professor Tyson has been at the. College since 1938, coining here from Cleveland, where he studied dramatic production and acted in the Cleveland Playhouse. He is a member of the National Associa tion of Teachers of Speech, the Association for Education by Radio, the Pennsylvania Speech Association, the. American Associa tion of University Professors, Theta Alpha Phi, and the Penn sylvania Society, Sons of the Revo lution. He has directed 'and acted in a number of Penn State Players productions, and has narrated sev eral transcriptions and motion pictures made by the Audio-Visual Aids Department. He recently took the - leading role in the educational film,d'Teach Them to Drive." Girl Scout Chairman . To Solicit tounsellors Coeds interested in becoming counsellors at Girl Scout camps this summer may confer with Miss, Elenore L. Hoover, chairman - ofthe 'Girl Scout Regional caMp Cohre ; mittee, at 110 Home Economic's -Building, 4 p.m. Monday. • • Requirements for counsellor are a minimum age of 19, a love of the out-of-doors, and an interest in girls. • Armour Meat Director To Lecture, Demonstrate Esther Latzke, director of the consumer service department of Armour and Company, will give a demonstration-lecture on "Making the Most of Meat Points" in 110 Home Economics Building 4:15 p. m. Thursday. Miss 'Latzke, who has B.S. and M.S. degrees in Home Economics and Nutrition from Kansas State College, writes under the name of Marie Gifford. Jaded Censors By Sergeant • s Providing a little variety for jaded, censors seems to be the hobby of Sgt. James T. Places, ex- Penn Stater, now serving in China. Along With names and • addresses, the envelopes he, sends: home are covered with painted scenes of rickshaws, pagodas, lakes, and ricefields. Fickes, an architecture student, left school in June, 1942, at the end of his junior year. He was a member of Apha Nu, physics hon ary, and chairman of several dances. Also , to his credit is the design of the Riding Club stables, and another permanent mark in the form of the kneeling blond farmer boy in the mural in Old Main, for which he posed. First landing in India, he later was sent to China to set up recre ation centers and is now teaching Chinese officers the use of Ameri can Lend-Lease armaments. Not ohly his family but his friends, who beg him to paint on the envelopes of their letters, are gradually building up a small art collection. In his paintings he has Sound a novel and interesting, way of keeping 'the folks back' home posted. 4 . One day, instead of the qtiainit Miss Ruth Seabui 7 y, representa tive of tile Danforth Foundation,. will speak to coeds in' Women's Building lounge 4:15 Tuesday. Miss. Seabury is scheduled to talk at the ficulty luncheon Monday noon and the PSCA dinner ,Mon day night. Charles Shop Exclusive Agency grow Shirts and 74V1i/i.: .Toilt. .:P.i‘ - ;].: gg§t ...C.0,17t;...Fi1t:.:2T Desir J. M.: Your 'symptoms are unmistakably those, of .a man suffering from subcicula strangulatiof or what we call, quite =tech - nically qshrunk collar." ' We prescribe a switch to Arrow shirts=they're Sanforized labeled (fabric shrinkage less than 1%). They'll not only relieve the pressure on your gtillet t , but also bolster your spirit-immeasurably with their good looks. $2.24 isp. - • Complete the prescription , with• !mum. swell•lookinr Arro* ties, and you'll be sunew 'man! $1 and $1:50. S' IP S TT S .V 4 ‘,.*`." , , FRIDAY, APRIL -13, 1945 Pe.pped,:„Ut*-;, Artistry oriental scenes- his wife, Mary Sprecher Fickes '43, was acustom- to receiving, there came a red barn set on top of a hill, titled, "Good, Old .Lancaster County:" Apparently nostalgic memories of home still haunt the soldiers,.even those surrounded by the glanior of Asia. Psychology Honorary Initiates 8 Members Eight students were initiated,• into Psi Chi, national psychology honorary, at a meeting in Bun ; rowes Tuesday evening. They are June Patterson, 'Ethel Davis, Jane Dye, Blythe Hartley, Theora Rap- ` paport, Evelyn Millner, Priscilla Wagner, and Helen ;Verner. In order to become candidates; students must maintain an .all college average of 2, and a 2 aver age in 12 credits of psychology.:. Following. the initiations, Dr.• Winona Morgan spoke on the func-, tions and philosophy of nursery school work, and indicated • the vast - opportunities in this field. Psi Chi is spon:soring.an address - by Dr. Kenneth Smoke of 'Juniata College when members of the hon orary and, the regular. psychology.. seminar join for a meeting in the Hugh Beay.er Room of Old Main,- 7:20, Wednesday. evening. • Recently elected Fencing Club . . officers are: Jeanne Anne Thorop s n, president; Evelyn Shuster, vice-president; •and. Betty Herring, ,secretary-treasuirer. , For Ties. ;3 - .4'.. i iN 0.?:10:r ,t . 1'..4:4i1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers