Voting Begins at 9 as Elections Enter Final Day Gotham Johnston 1 Site Satly 0 (ttotlegtan Clear VOC.. 45—No. 44 Chem Council Lists Candidate Names Candidates’ names for posts on the 1947-48 Chemistry - Physics Student • Council have been re leased by Raymond Shibley, this ..year’s president. Elections, under, ' the " supervision ot ••Air-College , Elections Committee', will be con ducted next Tuesday and Wednes ,day. Senior nominees from the chem istry, chemical engineering and commercial chemistry curricula are John Davis, Edward Holler, Jack Keller, William McTurk, Paul Schaefer, Robert Schock, Garth Seavy, Gladys Stryker, Richard Tarbox and Jay Tenzer. Seven members will be chosen from this group. Five juniors in the same cur ricula will be elected from among Douglas Brace, Samuel Firestone, Martha Frederickson, Malcolm Johnston, Marguerite Naumann, Jeane Nye and Robert Stokes. [Annette Banning, senior, and Martha Kramers, junior, are the only contestants for two seats in the science ourrieulum. Physicists David Barron, Wil liam Hossler and Paul Wilkins will vie for two senior seats. James Deets, Ethel Senkovits and Russell Waddell are the junior nominees for two positions. Three pre-medical posts will be filled from seniors Howard Fu gate, William Jaffurs, Jean Mc- Kinley and Joseph O’Tousa, Jun ior nominees for two seats are Abram Bosler, Patrick Galla, Michael Kutsenkow and Ray Ply myer. Late AP News Courtesy Radio Station WHAJ NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 4, St. Louis 3 Pittsburgh 11, Philadelphia 4 Chicago 3, Brooklyn 1 Boston 10, Cincinnati 3 AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 15, New York 5 Boston 7, Detroit 1 Chicago 5, Washington 2 ' PHILADELPHIA—L agg i n g hopes for an early end to tne tele phone strike have been given a lift by settlements in New t ortc uuy ana Pennsylvania, ine laiee ana four aouai wage agreements were maae by unions outsiae tne National Phone reaeranon, and many of tne 4'J.Ouu workers cov ered by the agreements taler voted hot to cross picket lines today. h*ym Mauxo THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 1, 1947—STATE COLLEGE, HENNA, Junior and Senior Women Revive Faculty Reception Phi Mu Aipha Gives Concert Phi Mu Alpha, men’s national music honorary, will present its, annual complimentary concert in- Sphwab auditorium at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Frank Hess, president, stated yesterday. Concerts by the Phi Mu Alpha were discontinued during the war, this being their first since that time. It is the third in a series of concerts sponsored by the department of music, and will be an ensemble program. The concert ensemble, com posed of thirty pieces, is under the direction of Leonard Dileanis, Robert ■ Fredrickson and Ernest Rotili. There will be a bassoon solo by Philip Miller and a piano solo, by J. Edmund Kelly. Selected numbers will be given by ■ a clarinet quartet, string quartet, trumpet trio, and the Honey Boys. The clarinet quartet is. composed of James Beach, Frank' Hess, James Kocher and Robert, Skiff er. Ag Frolic Tickets *re on Sale al SU Tickets for the Ag Frolic are on sale at Student Union today, ac cording to Henry Funk and Don Benson, co-chairmen. Tickets are $1.20, including tax. Carnival booths at the annual Frolic will feature such unusual games as betting on which hole a white mouse will run into, or throwing rolling pins fo r a prize, said W. Peter Horen, Frolic pub licity chairman. Combining a dance and the spirit of a carnival, the Frolic will take .j.ulO in ncci'Ca null nan mun o.ou io rz pan., aaiuruay. rweive cluds representeu on uie Ag atuaent wouilcil VVIII SxJOIIaUX Uli.kilX, X~IIX.CS win I>e &.ven lor tne Udi ueounx, as wen as inaivioiuai prizes a warn ed to tne winners a. eacui oootn. intermission entertainment will De provided by tne boney boys ana several skits, James Work.will be master of ceremonies. Wilson Roraback Baum Nitiany Independent Party Meily State Party Greenawali The traditional junior and sen ior women’s faculty reception will be revived in the second floor lounge of Old Main from 8 to 10 tonight. The affair, which is semi formaVis'the:first.since-1942;.- • Invitations have been sent to all faculty members suggested by junior and senior women through their representatives. Chairman Margar-t. Martin encourages at tendance by all juniors and sen iors, since they themselves are to be the hostesses. The men’s string quartet of Phi Mu Alpha, music honorary, will entertain. Cwens, IWA, Junior Service Board,' PSCA and WRA will as sist at the reception. Theta Sigma Phi Elects Officers Roberta recently elected president of the wom en’s journalism honorary, Theta Sigma Phi. Jean Thurston was chosen vice president; Kay Badollet, secre tary; Marjorie Mousley,-treasurer; and Marie Thompson, archivist. Recently initiated members in clude Janet Adler, Roberta Hutch ison, Betsy Marshall, Joan Pe ters, Mary Anne Pletcher, Helen Reed, Marie Thompson and Adele Yablon. PA Committee To Show Film on Public Health “Seeds of Destiny" is the main film in today’s Public Affairs Films showing in 10 Sparks at 10, 2:20 and 4:20 o’clock. Originally offered to distributors, the film was rejected as too harrowing for general audiences, said Jean Moore, film committee chairman. “The Story of Dr. Jenner” and “Defending the City’s Health" are also on the 40-minute program. Caps and Gowns touay is uie idai uuy lui sen iors to oraer caps anu gowns, invitations ana announcements, aceoraing to ueorge uonovan, xtunein. union manager. Arrangements lor tnese ma terials can oe maae in tne Ath letic Association omce in Old Main. , /. I !«j# miMm ' ■-hII 1 VST v Tr-v ■r , , I~tf Czekaj Rubin Banyai ' Fulmer Fiedorek PRICE FIVE CENTS Phi Beta Kappa Initiates Nine Nine seniors and one graduate of the College will be initiated into Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic honor society. May 14. Following the initiation at the Nittany Lion Inn, a dinner will be held'at which Dr. : George L. Haller, assistant dean of the School of Chemistry and Physics, will speak. Seniors named and their cur ricula are: Eleanor M. Aurand, pre-medical; George E. Bender, arts and letters; Eobert C. Din widdie, arts and letters; Eobert T. Foote, arts and letters; Mar garet M. Gramley, arts and let ters; Fred M. Keeker, arts and letters; Vivian L. Klein, arts and letters;, 'Charles P. Miller, arts and letters, and Ernest L. Nagy, arts and letters. Israel Zelitch, who received a bachelor of sci ence degree in agricultural and biological chemistry last Febru ary, also was named. For election to Phi Beta Kappa at the College, students are re quired to have had at least two years of residence at the College and must have attained an aver age grade of 2.5 while at Penn State. The work shall have been liberal in character. Students also are required to have shown a wide range of in terest and must have completed six credits each from six of the following eight subject matter groups: biological sciences, physi cal sciences, social sciences, phi losophy and psychology; mathe matics; English language and lit erature; foreign languages; and arts. News Briefs AVC Raffle Books All AVC members are request ed to turn in their raffle books at the Student Union desk by noon today, reported Melvin Katinsky, publicity chairman. Members whose books are not in will be charged a fee. ; Dairy Science Mr. Louis Bolter of the Babson Company will speak and present movies on “Clear Milk Produc tion’ ’ at the meeting of the Dairy Science Club, in Iff Dairy Hus bandry at 7 o’cock tonight. usance Class me pbca ounce class will be neld Tuesday evenings at 7, 7:45 and 8:30 o’ciocK in 40l Oid Main, instead of Thursday. Neely Troxell Branigan Reports 1000 Students Voted By End of First Day All-College elections will swing into their second and final day today when the polls in the Arm ory open at 9 am. They will re main open during the noon hour, closing at 5 pm. John Branigan, chairman of the Elections Committee, said that ap proximately 1000 students voted yesterday. Although this is little better than 18 per ceiit of the 5500 eligible to vote, Branigan said it compares with first-day figures in previous semesters. In the fall. semester elections,. jl .to tal of 2700 students, 40 per cent of the student body, voted. Branigan emphasized the fact that eighth semester students, of which there are 1200, are not eligible to vote, since they would be electing officers to serve after they* have graduated. Heferendum Questions Students, in addition to electing All-College officers, will vote on three referendum questions, (1) whether students prefer a student union or a field house, (2) wheth er students are willing to' be as sessed $5 per semester to be ap plied toward ' securing a Student Union, and (3) whether they are willing to be assessed fifty cents per semester for two semesters, starting in the fall semester, to purchase new Blue Band uni forms. AA Nominees Male students only will eiect Athletic Association officers. Can didates for president are Ernest Closser, Dean Hartman, John Potsklan, and Jack Tighe, while Jack Biery, Gerry Karver, and John Reeves compete for secre tary. Candidates for All-College President are Alan Hack, Nittany- Independent, and Thomas Lan nen, State. Samuel Neely, Nit tany-Independent, and Robert Troxell, State, are running for Al-College vice-president. All- College secretary-treasurer nomi nees are Eugen e Fulmer, Nittany- Independent, and Leo Fiedorek, State. (Continued on page jourj Ml School Continues Sale of Banquet Tickets Tickets are still on sal e for the Mineral Industries Banquet to be held at 6 o’clock tonight at the Nittany Lion Inn. They are priced at $2 each and may be purchased at the dean’s office m the Ml Building. A skn entitieu, "By rue* nug gars, 1347,” wui be presented unuer me direction or cuiaries Pneegor. in audition to this Bim er VV. Rehrson of tne U. S. Bur eau or Mines will speak or. "Tne Mineral PosLon of the United States.’’
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers