Lute AP • NewS Ci4urtesy Radio Station WMAJ LAKE SUCCESS —Atomic en ergy still has the United States and Russia deadlocked aver hone much to'rednee world armaments. :Russia's delegate Andrei. Gro anyko, last night, offered..a corn promise designed to break the stalemate in the United Nations Security Council. American dele gate Warren Austin refused to yield and insisted that the 'United States draft be- approved.' The United States and Russia are stymied on the question of defin ing the powers of th e new Arms Reduction Commission and the Atomic Energy Commission. Aus tin wants the work of both groups to be kept sharply separated. QUEBEC, Can. A fire that raged through the two top -floors of the Hotel St. Louis today has been brought under control. Firemen said there evidently was no one trapped or injured in the six-story. two hundred room hotel. WASHINGTON Labor issues held the floor as union and in dustry spokesmen hurled charges at each other. Th e , general coun=. sel for the Pennsylvania State Brewers' Association, Mead Mulv ihill, took the stand before the Hous e , Labor Committee. lie testi tied that a beer war between the A-F-of-L an d the CIO ha S spread terroism an d anarchy through the Pittsburgh area. NEW YORK Former Minne sota Governor Harold E. Stassen challenged the Republican Party last night to bury its dead—mean ing economic isolationists. Stassen, who is openly bidding for the top GOP nomination in 1948—spoke befor e the National Republican Club in a Lincoln Day address. He told his New York audience that the GOP must abandon economic isolation. Get ting down to brass tacks, Stassen said he meant 'th e ihigh tariff pol icy some ilePtiblieWi legislaitorsi are demanding —% Tolley which Stassen .said ."no .longer .suits America." WASHINGTON=- Secretary of War Patterson' spoke up tonight .. : i , ,:against: ; eongressional ~,..plans to eared that if the 'proposed Cut in Ariny fund , goes - through. current and long-term missions will be in danger. That includes, he said, the missions of General MacAr thur in ..TaPan• and General Mc iNarney in Germany. - Heizel, Euwema Return from Trip - Dr. Ralph Dorn cHetzel, prek • dent of the College, and Dr. Ben Enwema, dean of the School of Liberal Arts, returned to the oEmpus today after attending a three-day meeting of the execu-: tive committee of .the Association of Land-Grant Coljegea and Uni- Nersities in Washington. (President 'ff-letzel was recently elected head of the Association and Dean - Euwema was named chairman of the newly treated Liberal Arts Seption of the As sociation: Between. semesters •President Tletzel- represented the Associa tion at a meeting df a special committee on a Federal Depart ment- of - Education, Health, and Welfare. The committee was or • ganized by the American Council on Education and the National Social Welfare Assembly. The committee gave considera tion to the advantages and disad vantages of coordinating the fed eral administration of education, health, and welfare in a single agency. Special' attention was given to the Taft-Fullbright Bill and Pres ident Truman's Reorganivation Plan. - . Enrollment Increases With Late Registrations The number of registrants for the 1947. spring semester reached a total of 6830 students by five o'clock last night, said William S. Hoffman, registrar. (Friday and Saturday, regular registration days in Recreation Hall, 6220 students were officially admitted. Anoth e r 400 were added Mondity and 210 students were registered Tuesday and yeSterday. .. . . . . ..,. ' ' . ' '. 1 '; • '..;,. :". . 's . ' ::. , 4-. • ~,. :t, i d i o t '-.-:' --.;,- . !7 . . _. . ~.. • ' 1, : . ..7 : 'd.' `` - V il lialgrAP . At • , 0.- 1 i VOL. 450. 4 Coeds Get Extra Heart TO Wear On Sleeve For WRA Dance Coeds are literally wearing their hearts on the outside today. The red-paper hearts women stn dents are attaching to their sweaters. and coats are being dis tributed wih tickets !to the WRA Sweeheart Dance which are now on sale at Student Union, Lee Ann Wagner, dance chairman, said. 'Tickets to the dance, which will be held at White ‘Hall from 9 to 112 Saturday eventing, following the gymnastic meet with Army in Recreation Hall from 8 to 9 o'- clock,' will be sold at $1.20 per couple tax included at Student Union until Saturday noon. Tick ets will also be sold at the door, Miss Wagner said. Christian Groups Plan Observance .Srinday is "World Student Day of Prayer.". Christian students the world over set aside this day annually as one for united pray er. Worship services to which all students are invited will be. held in Grace Lutheran Church, 114 S.. Atherton street at 7:1810 Sunday. "Prayer" will be the subject of an address by Rev. E. E. Korte, pastor to Lutheran students at Penn State. Robert Gehlard; a student at the College, will render -a solo, "One World." In addition, there will ,be prayers of interces sion: by students of afferent eth nic and national baCkground. The ,ohservancp, is sponsored jointly. by the student,groue,of: the . Grace Lutheran the PSOA. Patricia Woods is "general chairman. In charge Of publicity is Helen Coxe.. House , committee members• are Naomi Bastuscheck -and Beatrice Kaufman. The Program. conmilt teA include William Glenn, Mar tha Dennis, Elwood Stetler, Rus urn Ray, Jo Casseiberry. and Frank Richardson. Free Radio Messages Foi Students By W3YA With an active• membership of twenty-five students, professors, and townspeople, W3YA, the col lege amateur station, .licensed, by Prcifessor. 'Gilbert • L., 'Crossley offers. a free Servlce •to students of 'the College. Recently, the station Was estab 7 lished as an Official Relay 'Sta tion of the Amateur Radio Relay League network in the western Pennsylvania area. Through this network the sta tion is able to send jradiegrarns to all parts of the country and the world. The •members would be glad to' send free in this country or to any G.I. overseas any greet ing or message of 'significant in formation. A message received by 6:30 p. an. will :be sent the same day. All messages should be left at the station on West College Ave nue (behind the power plant: Greetings of 20 to 30 words have been sent to Center, Texas; Boston, Mass.; Oak Ridge, Tenn.; Rechester, N. Philadelphia, Penna.; Spokane, •Wash.; and Manila, P. I. 'Brother-Sister Groups Announce Relationship Alpha Phi chapter of Delta Delta Delta ir.nd Alpha Delta chapter of Chi Phi made formal announcement • at a dinner in the Chi Phi fraternity house last night of sister-brother relation ship between sorority and fra ternity. Chi Phi president Gilbert J. Huber presented TrWDelt presi dent Josephine Leib with a cut glass punch (bowl. Dr. David C. Duncan, advisor, and Mrs. Dun can were guests. • THURBDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 13; 1947---EIDATE COLLEGE; PA Junior Class Meets To Take Stand Tonight on Prom Corsage Issue "Tonight the Junior class will have an opportunity to decide whether they want corsages at their dance," said Eugene Fulmer, Junior chars predident, The open discussion meeting has bee n sdhed uled in led SParks at 7 o'clock tonight. Fulmer explained in an open letter to the Junior class, printed in yesterday's Collegian, that the question had become widely debated a s to whether or not corsages Would be necessary at the Junior Prom which Will be give s in Recreation Hall, February 21. He therefore arranged this meeting to give the members of the ()lass an oPPorto nity to express tiheir opinion. • "It is very important that every member of the Junior class attend this meeting," Fulmer said, "as the decision may influence future dances." A special meeting of the Junior class advisory board composed of seven members and acting as a cross-section of the Junior class will be held before the general class meeting. :Members of the board are Adele Ernst, Peter Johnson, Alfred Lentz, Henrietta' Monroe, Albert Rosenblatt, Ralph Rudy, and Eliz abeth Watts. The class officers including Ful mer, Charles Willing, the vice president, and Jacqueline Zivdc, class secretary, are unofficial members of the advisory board. Stuart Davis Adds To MI Art Exhibit Of the 24 • famous American water colorists represented in the current - exhibition at the Col lege, one is especially 'well known to. students and faculty on the campus. 1 1-Ig „is. Stuart Davis„ who., pre 'lenteir '"Glatibester Landscape," to the- College. It now hangs in the lounge of Old Main. Davis is 'represented in the current exhibit by "Boat Land ing." The exhibition, which will con tinue in the Mineral . Industries Art Gallery until February 26, is open from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. The .24 watercolors are front the permanent collection of The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and have been brought to the campus by the di vision of fine 'arts of the depart ment of arbhitecture. Started in .1908 to aid Amer ican artists to place their work before the pUblic, the Whitney Museum is albout to become a branch of the Metropolitan Mu seum of • Art, and is to occupy a wing of • its own, adjoining, the Metropolitan in Central Park. The Whitney Wing will have the advantage of the Metropoli tan's powerful backing and 'will in return give to the older mu seum an active participation in living. American Art, to 'balance its necessary preoccupation with the art of the past, of all periods and nations. fin - addition _to the painting by Davis, the exhibit at the College includes watercolors by su c h well-known artists as Charles Burohfield, John Steuart Curry, Charles Demuth, Emil Ganso, John Marin, Reginald Marsh, and Boardman Robinson. Dercum Visits Ski Club With Western Scenes Showing movies of trips taken by members between semesters will be the high light of the meet ing of the Penns Valley Ski Club in 110 Electrical Engineering at 7:30 tonight, Max Dercuirn, former College ski coach, will attend the meet ing with his wife, Edna, and they are expected to bring slides and films of their experiences in the Arisphoe basin in Colorado. Forestry Society Forestry Society will meet in 105 Forestry at 7:30 o'clock. R.. D. Tonkin., pulpwood buyer for West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company, will be guest .speaker. , . • 4. •'Weather . ggititt Cloudy with Probable Snow Junior Prexy UGENE FULMER Seniors All seniors who have had [pictures taken for La• Vie must turn the proofs into the Photo Shop immediately. PanhelAnnounces Revised Rushing Changes in the plans for soror ity rushing were announced to day by Florence Ratchford, Pan hellenic president. The sororities will hold open houses for all in dependent women from 3 to 5 Saturday and Sunday as already scheduled. • There will be no silent period following the open houses, ,hciw ever, Miss Ratchford said. The original plan was for a week's silent period after the open houses. Bids to prospective men beTs may be mailed at the beginning of the fourth week of this semes ter. instead of the sixth week as had been previously stated. The changes were decided upon at the last Panhellenic counlcil meeting. Elementary Teachers To Be Honored at: Tea The college chapter of the As sdciation for Childhood Educa tion will hold a Valentine tea in the Northeast Atherton Lounge from - 2:30 to 4:30 Saturday after noon to honor the State College Elementary School teachers. (Dr. George E. Simpson, head of the sociology department, will be guest speaker. "Jamaica in Transition" will be his subject. The tea will be held in 'apprecia tion of kindness and considera tion shown by. State College teachers in permitting Elemen tary Education students to ob serve in their easses. Francine Gittlemacher, (presi dent of the organization, and Helene Deerman, social chairman, announced that all arrangements have been completed for the tea which will be the first cif the se mester's activities. Money and Unsold Books Now Available at BX Students who have turned' books in for sale at the exchange are advised to pick up their mon ey today or Friday at 4011 Old Main, Jane Weigle, chairman of the exchange said today. 'Unsold books must be claimed by Friday' night, she added. PRICE FIVE CMNI'TS Players Show Opens Tonight 274 Year Old Play Satirizes •Hypocondriac Tonight at 8 o'clock when Frederic Vogel o pens Moliere's corned y, "Imaginary Invalid," with the Prologue, a 274-year-old play, satirizing the hypocon drkc, will be presented. Jean Baptiste Poquelin, the au thor, under the "nom du theatre" of Moliere, has been named one of 'the world's greatest satiric dramatists, according to Merritt Stone, who adapted "Imaginary Invalid" for the American stage. Stone mentions that Moliere's comedies, "The Would Be Gen tleman," "The School for Wives," "The Misanthrope," and others, have been described by some as the keenest critical satires on social, professional, and moral conventions to be found in all dramatic literature. Show director, Robert Reit sneider, says "Moliere compares roughly to Shakespeare' not neces sarily in literary works but dra matic works." was while acting the title role as the hypocondriac, Mon sier Ardin, in "imaginary In wild" that Moliere died. Players will feature Harold Chidnoff in. this .role. In . oharge of crews is William Folwell, stage manager. Aim Dun away heads the paint crew; Eliz abeth Duiikel, property crew; Gordon Fiske, construction 'crew; Frances Glass and Janet 'Baylor, costume crew; Duffield Sipes, furniture crew; and Karl Van D'Elden, advertising crew. (Robert Kendall is supervisor Of the entire show, with Barbara Cooper • as bodkholder, '..;Herbert Seaton, - student • technical direc tor, and Ruth Rosenbaum as as sistant technical director. News Briefs Alpha Phi Della Joseph Lenito was elected presi dent of Alpha Phi Delta fratern ity. Other officers named' are Jo seph Novello, vice preslident; Richard, Cur t o, secretary;, and Frank Franco, treasurer. Froth Meeting Froth business candidates. , are asked to meet in. the Froth office. Carnegie Hall, at 4:3:0 o'cleek..All; sophomore • candidates must at tend, Business Manager Sheldon Mermelstein Said- today, • ...;. Fencing Club INTRiA Fencing Club will rear garTize in the White Hall Fencing Room at 7 o'clock tonight, under the direction of Robert SWope, captain of the men's fencing team. All beginning andl advancedi fencers are welcome. Bible Study A Bible , study .class will be taught this semester by Mrs. Mal colm Brown. The 'class twill meet in the Hugh Beaver, Rhom o Old! Main every Thursday at 4:15 o'clock, and is open to the public. PSCA Get-Together • A PSCA. Get-Together will be held in 304 Old „Main at 7:30 o'- clock, Emory Brown, PSCA Pres ident, staid today. Ruth Krause. Bonni A Lee Sherrill, and Beatrice Kaufman are in charge of decora tidncs. A E Phi Nears Ils $lOO Goal For X-GI Nursery The money raised by the Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority for tthe bene fit of the X-GI Nursery School is nearing its .$lOO gual, according to Eleanor Koiplovitz, committee chairman. This money, Miss Koplovitz said, will be used by the nursery to buy needed equipment for the children. The drawing will take place Tuesday, isnd the winning per sons will be contacted.