Lacrosse i Page 6 VOT Waygood Wins Top WSGA Post WRA Elects Baker As Next 'President Mary Lou. Way.good tapped Jean Nelson by 33 votes to win the post of WSGA president. Ann Baker defeated Jane Schlosser in the race for WPA president. 313 coeds cyst, their ballots. Installa tion will take place Tuesday. WSGA, vice-ipresident Suzanne Romig won 'out over her oppon ent, Violet Gillespie by a mar gin of 48 votes, while Marjorie Gorham won the position of treasurer on the ,strength of 22 votes. Running against her Was Patricia Kinkead. Two ballots spelled the differ ence-when Margaret Martin was elected senior senator over Cath erine Garrett. 'Fourth. and fifth semester coeds named Patricia Meily junior sen ator, defeating Bunny - Rosenthal. They were 12 ballots ,vpart. Soph omore senator• for the coming fall semester wil .Ibe Janet Ly ons who won out over Betty Lou Horn by 14 votes. ._Susan Bissey. will,serve as town. senator...: Her oPP9Pent was ! lean Pepper, who 'lost the electiOn by 3 . votes. On the , WRA slate, the vice president will be Lee Anne Wag (Continued on page' eight) IWA,PSCHoId 'Calico Caper' Coeds will go to the "Calico Caper" • in their very prettiest cdttons It the request of the co sponsors, IIWA, and the Penn State Club. Music for the dance in Rec Hall from 9 to 12 Saturday night will be provided 'on rec ord by many name bands. • -.lntermission ' will feature a surprise . according to . Esther Ger shman, co-chairman of the Pub licity . committee.. Serving with her -is. Clifford Koelle. Other corn nriittee membbers• ere Suzzane Cpnroe, Thomas Dolphin, Mi chael Horen, Robert Kraplart, Shirley.- Radbord, and Vera Sle zak.. - Shirley Levinson and • Wal .terjiEiScoe are Co-chairmen of the social• committee; Gene Fulmer and Pascoe, of the lights and tick ets 'committee. i Admission to- the dance is s.7s per couple and $.40 per person. OPA Survey Reports Inspection of Stores :• (Professor' James A. Cross, in dharge: of the recent .OPIA .ceiling price survey, announced' that ap sproxitnately 17. food .stores, 5 au, tomobile dealers and 20 restaur ants had: been impected, and all rciports sent in to the Bellefonte office by May 08. - 'Reports of 'violations will be received by Professor Cross= in about three weeks. The next sur vey will start on about June I's, and will include a larger nom 'bar of automobile dealers. - Section / leaders for this survey were Donald Von (Lunen, in change of restaurants; • Joh TI Mill. grocery stores; and ,Mur ray, Friedman, automobile deal ers. Dean Steidle To Speak tin NI Education Future 'Dean Edward Steidle of the School of Mineral Industries will address the M. I. Society in 121 Mineral Industries, at 7:15 p.m. Vuesday. He will speak on the subject. "Where Does Mineral Industries Education Go • from Here?" 'An important business meeting v 11 follow. the ,lecture. , Tatirgiatt THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 30, 1946-4 STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA How Would You Spend $6000? Joseph Steel, recently ap pointed chairman ,of the All- College cabinet committee on the dispo4ition of funds, has announced that the committee would like to receive sugges tions from the student body in order that no worth while sug gestion may be overlooked in disposing of the $6OOO. If you have a worth-while suggestion for the spending of this sum, don't fail to turn it in at Student Union on or be fore June 6. Blue Band Gives Outdoor Concert `Cl3allet of the Unhatched Chtok ens" :from Moussourgsky's suite, "Pictures at an Exhibition,-' will be -presented by the Blue. Band in front of Old Main at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. 'Other selections from the suite twhidh the iband iwilil plary are "Promenade," "The Old Castle," "Children Quarreling at Play," "Bydlo," "The Hut ,of B,aba- Yega,' - and - "The. Great _Gate. of- Xle.v." • • . • . . Heading the . pl.7ogr4i . bY type 83 Members of Blue .8ar.34 is "rrrorm:. hones - Triurnphai - tt," with 'an as semblage of eight trombones• do ing the honors. Four student - conductors who 'will wave the baton for four of the selections at• the concert are Joseph Gavononis;-Glenn Orndbrf, Donald . Sandt, and Albert Zim- Men :Hummel Fishburn, protfes sor of music and head of the de partment of Musk, direct. The remaining - selections . which tone tband will perform are: "IMarthi Militaire Francaise" by Saint- Saens, "Autumn" by Leidten, "Rhythms of Rio" by Bennett, "National Emblem. March" by Bagley, `Baint Louis Blues" by (Continued on page seven) Hillel 'Foundation To Hold Open House Saturday Hillel's annual Open House will be held at the Foundation, from 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday, Music will be presented by Jim Jury and his band: Refreshments will be senved; • The affair is under the direc tion of Yvette Levine, chairman of the social committee. Others waking with her are Helen Fin der, • refreshments; and - Melvin Fine, decorations. The • public is invited. to. attend. . . Boal,sbu . ig .Claims Birthplace Of Fiat Methgrial . :. Day Folks in the quaint village of Boalsburg, three miles south 'of State College, claim their town to be the birthplace of Memorial Day. Resting quietly in Penn's Val ley at the foot of Seven Moun tainF., the town of Boalsburg is far enough from the main way to maintain a .solemn Boalgburg plays its histori cal role in a quiet, unassuming manner. • David Boal, the lown's first resident, settled there in the year 17419. In 1808, the village was laid out, and its epoch-making career (began. It was during the Civil War, residents will tell you, that the praetiee of decorating a soldier's grave was - first begun at the BoalSburg Cemetery. On the 4th of July, 1865, Emma Hunter, later Mrs. J. T. Stuart, went to decorate the grave of her father, PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY BY THE COLLEGIAN STAFF Morse To End Forum. Series Board Chooses Moore As New to-Chairman Senator Wayne Morse, Repub lican leader ,Prom Oregon, will speak on "Labor Troubles Ahead" in Schwab - Auditorium at 6 p.m. tonight. His talk will conclude the Community Forum Series for the semester. The :comer Dean of the Law School at . the 'University of Ore gon and head of the Was Labor Board is exerting leadership in Congressional affairs at. Washing ton and is one of the strong pro ponents of the reorganization of Congress' so that it can do its work New Forum Chairman DR. BRUCE V. MOORE more efficiently and quickly. At an official meeting of the representatives df the community and campus organizations !partici pating in the Conrrmunity Forum; Dr. B. V. Moore, head of the de partment of psychology at the Col lege, was elected co-chairman i of the Forum for the ensuing year. .He will succeed James T. Smith, who has held that position for the - :first two years of the new organization's existence: lA. stu dent will he selected sometime be fore the beginning of the fall sea son to serve with Dr. Moore. The rest of the executive .comlrnittee officially elected includes the fol lowing:i Hugh Pyle, booking chair man and vilce:•chairmlan of the Forum; Miss Jessie Haven, secre tary; and Dr. E. B. Van Ormer, t rpn,surer. Those organizations !cordposing the Forum during the past year (Continued on page seven) Dr. Reuben Hunter. He had been surgeon, with ! the 54th Penn sylvania Volunteers, and had died of typhoid fever at Annap olis:. Maryland, •on !September 4th, 1864. • Cross of Flowers As the s tory is told, young Em ma was on her way to cemetery, located beside the Boalsburg Lu theran Church, when she met Sophie Keller. Together th e young women went to decorate Dr. Hunter's grave. While mak ing a cross of flowers and a wreath, they thought it \Vould .be fitting, considering the day, to decorate all the graves Of sol diers buried there. Going home. they procured more flowers and laurel, and along with some friends, made a wreath for every soldier's grave. The formal order of Command er-in-Chief Logan• of the Grand Army, establishing the Memorial Day, was dated May 5, 1864. Memorial Exercises To Feature Walker Judge Ivan Walker will be the principal speaker Thurs day when the College joins the nation in Memorial Day exer cises. The program will be held in front of Old Main at 11: 15 Because the calendar for the current semester is still on the accelerated plan, Thursday will not be a holiday at the College. President R. D. Hetzel Bullinger Lists Graduation Plan Regulations for the Spring se mester commencement exercises have beeh issued by C. E. 'Bull inger, Co:lege. Marshall. The aca demic procession into. Recreation Hall will move" promptly at 1:45 p.m., Thursday, June 27. Candidates for degrees are ask ed to meet on the Mall in front of the Library at 1:30 p.m. The fol lowing Schools will gather on the Sparks side: and and Letters, Chemistry and Physics, ~Mineral Industries, and PhySical Educa tion. On the Burrowes side will be candidates from the Schools of .Education, Agriculture, Engineer ing, and the :Graduate School. School banners will indicate the appropriate meeting places. In Cage of bad weather, the can didates are requested to sit in the Recreation building according •to 'the• following arrangement. Those scheduled to meet on the Sparks side of the Mall will sit on. the south side of the building, and the others on the north side. The Graduate School candidates are exceptions to this plan, and will sit on the. south side beyond the bleachers. .-Academic costume is required except for students wearing the regular uniform of the armed forces. Mr. Bullinger emphasized that . onlSr . Presidential action will (Continued on page three) Osborne To Address Faculty Luncheon Club Milton S. Osborne, newly-ap pointed head of the department of architecture at the College, will address the . Faculty Luncheon Club Monday on the. subject, "De-: velopment of the Arts in Canada." Osborne, since 1929, had been director of the department of architecture and fine arts at the University of Manitoba, Winni peg, Canada. 1865 Boalsburg's claim of being. the birthplace, appears to be well founded. Beath's History of the Gnrnd Army states that soldiers' graves were decorated. at Water loo, New York, May 27, 1866, and at Cincinnati in 1867 which is after the date set for the inaug ural of the custom at Boalsburg. Keller Speaks The residents of Boalsburg honor their war dead annually in the same manner. The ceremonies have grown more elaborate with the years, but a wreath of laurel remains as the symbol of trib ute, just as it did on that 4th of July in 1865. Tonight at the BoalSburg Cem etery, John 0. Keller, grand nephew of Sophie Keller, will give the Memorial Day address. Keller is Asiistant to the PreSi dent, in charge of Extension, at the College. Memorial Services Today PRICE FP/ 7 E CENTS announced, however, that 11 o'clock classes will be sus- pen ded. Military units will form parallel to and inside the inner diagonal walks on front campus. The pub lic, students, faculty, and staff may gather on the walks, the ter race, the steps of Old Main. and on the lawn back of the military units. Color guards and repre sentatives of local veterans' or ganizations and the borough will stand just in front of the terrace between formations of the officers of the Army and Navy units. After the military units have marched to position, there will be music by the NROTC band, fol lowed by the invocation by Dr. Herbert Koepp-Baker. Judge Walker will then speak. Follow ing the sounding of taps, the flag will be raised while the National (Continued on page three). SS Penn State Docks June 14 Recreation Hall will become the SS Penn State for one night, the evening of the Benny Good man dance, sponsored by the In terfraternity Council, June 14. According to Stanley chairman Of the dance commit tee, the Students Will enjoy a very, nautical evening. Typical of the elaborate decorations planned is a 30-foot flagpole to be erected in Rec Hall. Pennants will fly and davits to support six life boats Will be installed on the gymnasium wall. One wall is to be decorated as the captain's qu'arters. One of the largest crowds in Penn State•history is expected to attend the dance, Ziff •believe's. The affair will highlight one of the semester's "biggest" week ends which will also include the Thespian production "No Time for Trouble" and many fraternity houseparties. The dance is to be strictly in formal. As part of the plan to accomodate the large crowd, the usual fraternity booths will be dispensed with. !Featured with the Goodman band are Art Lund, male vocal (Continued On Page Three) Sixth Semester To Sign For Ski 'Lodge Party Guests Welcome—Willing lAN sixth semester students and their guests who expect to attend the sixth semester party at the Ski Lodge tomorrow night should sign. up at Student Union today before 5 p.m., according to Charles Willing, president. Busses will leave for the Ski Lodge from the corner of Col lege and Allen at 6:30 p.m. to morrow, and will return at mid night. The only cost of the party will be for the bus fare. Music for dancing and refresh ments will be provided by the committee. "In the event of a iitteiibug contest." commented Willing, "the committee is pre pared to make a worthwhile award to the winning team." Although the party has been scheduled primarily for sixth semester • students, members of Other ,classe s may also attend if they sign up at Student Union.