Exams Begin Tuesday /VOL. 45—No. 57 Big Weekend Includes Senior Ball, Carnival College Resumes Orientation Week Upperclassmen at the College probably remember their Fresh man Week as one of combined amazement and bewilderment along with lots of fun and new friends. Well, this fall, there won’t toe any freshmen but the College is planning an Orienta tion Week for transfers that will be comparable to previous Fresh men Weeks. The week will officially. begin with an informal welcome mass meeting September 21. In the past the freshman enrollment seldom exceeded 1400 and Schwab was 'used ■ for all activities, but with the expected 300 neiw students in the fall, Rec Hall will probably be the scene of the mass meet ings. Members .of Junior . Service Board, junior women’s honorary, vill act as junior sponsors to the new women. They will meet busses and be assigned to the Uv ng units of the transfer women ob e more or less “big sisters.” • There will be councellor meet ings for the men : sponsord by the Christian Association. Fraternity ■ushing will also begin during his Orientation 1 Week. ... During the week' there will ,be .ur hours of school meetings 'at hich the new students may be ome acquainted, with the heads £ their chosen departments'. Four ours of- psychology aptitude, tests :•>. jre -alstj on. ! the < iSchedul4'. l, English and’mathematics, placed ment tests, and also a complete (Continued on'page eight). ■ 9r. F. E. Reinarfz 3peaks at Schwab Dr. Frederick E. Reinar-tz from ie Lutheran Church House, Neiw 'ork City, will speak on “A Word' .tly Spoken’’ at the Chapel serv a in Schwab Auditorium at 11 m. Sunday. She speaker was the first sec -tary for the promotion of the Jniied Lutheran Church in Amer ica. He also ha s been pastor of the Holy. Trinity Church in New York. Dr. Reinartz attended Gettys burg College and did graduate :ork at Harvard. As a graduate 3llow, he studied at Lutheran heological Seminary in Gettys urg. Class Day Set For June 8; Seniors To Receive Awards Class Day exercises will take place on Old Main lawn at 7:30 p. m., June 8. At that time Fred Keeker, valedictorian, and Joan Harrington, salutatorian, for the Class of 1947 will make their ad dresses. Awards will be presented to th e 20 outstanding seniors named by All-College Cabinet and also to the Senior Honor Men and Women who include Curtis Stone, Spoon Man; Robert Foote, Bar rel Man;' Bronco Kosanovich, Cane Man; and . Michael Blatz, Class Donor. Charles Pfleegor will make the Pipe Oration. Honor women include Mary Lou Waygood, Bow Girl; Jean Nelson, Slipper Girl; Lynette Lundquist, Fan Girl; ■ Margaret Martin, Class Poet and Nancy Harrington, Class Donor.' Flor ence Ratchford will make the Mirror Oration. The gilt to the College of ap proximately $6OOO from the Class of 1947 will be presented to President Ralph Dorn Hetzel by Charles Pfleegor, senior class president. This will be split among three projects, $5OOO of l ,’which is to be used lor a banquet latly |g| (Mltgtan Senior Picnic All seniors planning to go to the senior picnic must sign up at Stu dent Union by May 29. said Lyn ette Lundquist, chairman. Buses will leave the Corner at 1:30 p.m. June 7, and will return at 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Cabinet Elects New Committees All-College Cabinet, led by newly-elected prexy Thomas J. Lannen, named and. approved appointments and committees for 1947-48, in its first post-election meeting last night.. Greatest dispute arose over the selection of delegates to repre sent Penn State at the National Student Organization Convention at the University of Wisconsin in August. According to the rules set up by this organization, which is - dedicated to organizing stu dents to better solve their varied problems, Penn State is allowed four voting delegates. • Six-nominations were received from. the floor by Lannen. A half-hour debate followed which finally , resulted in the electing of Jane Fouracre, Eugene Fulmer, allan ,-Ostar, .and Robert Troxell for /the trip. \ In further- Cabinet voting, Har ris Gilbert was named the new parlimentarium; Public Occa sions.. appointees were Claire Parks/and ..John L,. Sigler, .u 1 /. -:'/ --; .JTB? , chairman of Tribunal, Alan Hack, Cabinet voted in Jeff Hathaway,: Richard Morgan, William Reim er,. -Ted Rubin, Robert Sankey, George Schantz, and Steve Yuhas. Jane Spicher’ will- head next year’s Womens Judiciary Board. She will be assisted by Mary Margaret Barnett, Lois Heyd, Phyllis .Janies, Marion Memory, Jean Moul, Mary K. Rice, and Joan Seltzer. The Elections Committee will be led by William Staley. Other members elected to his commit tee are David Adelman, Charles Bushnell, Nan James, Creston Ottemiller, Mary Pennel, J. Ar thur Stober, and Marion Swet lick. Jane Weigle will be chairman of the Book Exchange Commit tee,’ assisted by Joanne Hobbs, Eleanor Kelly, Joseph W. Kelly, Anne Lantz, Frank Rugh, John Zora and William Walker, who volunteered to serve on the com mittee without compensation. Members of the Forensic Coun (Continued on page eight) room in the proposed Student Union. The second portion of $lOOO will be used to purchase ope year memberships for all graduating seniors in the Alumni Association. The third part of $lOO will be given to the astron omy department to begin a new observatory. Richard Frontman will act as master of ceremonies and music is being arranged for by Ethyl Pitt man. The Class Day committee in cludes Fred Keeker, chairman; Albert Green, Lynette Lundquist, Barbara McCleary and Mary Lou Waygood. Graduation Invitations Graduation invitations and announcements for all ■ seniors are ready for distribution at Student Union desk today and tomorrow morning. Seniors who. ordered invitations or an nouncements are requested to bring their receipts to Student Union with them. FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 23, 1047—STATE COLLEGE, PENNA. Guest Conductors Lead Blue Band Eleven guest conductors - will each lead a selection in the Blue Band, Outdoor “Pop” concert on the front campus at 3:30 Sunday. In advent .of rain the concert will be in Schwab Auditorium. A lighter type of music than the indoor concert will comprise the program. Many marches and semi-popular pieces will be pre sented. Marjorie Rex will conduct a number from the last Blue Band concert, “Eighteenth Century Drawing Room” by Raymond Scott. Other numbers from the last concert are “Pavanne” by Morton Gould, Jo Rotili conduct ing; and 'March of the Pioneers” by Carleton Colby, E. Joanne Bro berg conducting. Cole Porter’s “I Get a Kick Out of You” will be under the baton of William Barwis. R. Penn Minerd will direct the love scene from. “Boris Godunov” by Mos sorgsky. “Grandioso” by Seitz will be conducted by Leonard Dileanis and “Amparita Roca” by Frank Hess. ’ Among the. marches on the pro gram are the “March of Youth” directed .by . Fred Swingle, the “Gloria” march by James Beach, and “Worlds Events" march by. Ernest Rotili. E. Carol . Broberg (Continued -on page eight) . DailykjCpllegign£^o: Last edition of the Daily Col legian will be published Tues day, not today, as previously announced. All stories and ad vertisements should be turned in at the Collegian office by 4 p.m. Monday. La Vie Appoint' Hutchison Editor Robert Hutchison has been named editor-in-chief of the 1947-48 LaVie staff reported Sey mour Rosenberg, present editor today. Other appointments on. the new staff are Stanton Roth, man aging editor; Marjorie Mousley, photo editor; Lois High, Alan Os tar and Jean Posey, associate editors. Barbara Jelen, and Mary Kath ryn Rice, assistant photo editors; Harriet Morgan, woman’s editor; and Robert Widder, art editor. • Those on the Senior Board in clude Martin Brill, Eleanor Feh nel, Donna Outrhan, Louise Smith, Elizabeth Watts and Sel ma Zasofsky. This year’s LaVie, the first printed since 1944, w on ’t be available before September, said Rosenberg. All graduating seniors will be mailed copies of the year book at their- home address as soon as it is published. J PSCA All-College Cabin Parly Slated Tomorrow An All-Colleg e Cabin Party will be held at the PSCA cabinet tomorrow, according to Barbara Keefer and Scott Rhoades, co chairmen of the cabin commit tee. Those planning to attend should sign up at 304 Old Main before noon tomorrow. The party, will leave from the rear of Old Main at 2:30 o’clock tomorrow afternoon, and will 're turn Sunday morning. Cabin party activities will include a doggie roast, hiking, and a square dance. Committees in charge of the party are Billie Blair and Louise Conte, advertising; Ruth Gilmore and Jean Moore, food; Warren Myers and Earl Sherwood, trans portation; and Betty Hemphill, program. Last Dance Features Spivak; Mortar Board Backs Festival CHARLIE SPIVAK Pa. Publishers Hear Seltzer Louis B. Seltzer, editor of the Cleveland Press, will be one of the guest speakers. at the annual Pennsylvania Newspaper Pub lishers’ Association; press confer ence *,be .:held' at -- J the starting tomorrow. At the opening session this af ternoon, a panel discussion will be conducted by three graduates of the American Press Institute. They are John -C. Calpin, assist ant city editor, the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin; Edward Johns ton, city editor, the Chester Times; and Stuart’ S. Taylor, pic ture editor, the Bulletin. The annual PNPA banquet will be held in the Nittany Lion Inn at 6:30 tomorrow night. Prof. Franklin C. Banner, head of the journalism, department, will pre side. Principal speaker at the ban quet will be the Honorable Clar ence J. Brown, Congressman from Ohio. Mr. Brown will speak on ‘.‘The Washington Picture.” Tonight at an informal ban quet newspapermen will hear Editor Seltzer speak on “The Newspaper and Its Community.” (Continued on page seven) Application blanks for de ferment of fees for the 1947-48 fall semester are now ready at the office of the bursar. Appli cations may be filed without fe e up to and including August. 26, according to the bursar's office. Fall semester fees will be paid October 17. ■ ROTC Absentees All absentees from Wednesday’s Army BiOTC common “R” forma tion must present a military let ter of explanation to Major Powhida by 10 a.m. Monday. Sigma Delta Chi All members of Sigma Delta Chi, National Journalism Profes sional Fraternity, are urged to at tend a meeting in MB Carnegie Hall, 7 p.m. Monday. Elections will be held. Room Keys All women students, as ■ soon as they are through with exams, may turn their room keys in to Miss Mobus •at Atherton Hall and re ceive a certificate for $5 which can be collected at the Office of the Bursar. Senior Ball with Charlie Spi vak, and the Mortar Board Car nival will feature the weekend activities as campus social events draw to a close for the semester. The Mortar Board Carnival site has been changed to the area be hind the Phi Delta Theta house, and will continue from 2 to 5 p.m. Charlie Spivak, his trumpet and orchestra, will provide the music at the Senior Ball in Rec Hall from 9 o’clock tonight until 1 a.m. Coeds have been granted “two o’clocks” to attend the dance. . The advance sale, limited to 1,- 500 tickets at $3.60, will begin at 8 o’clock this morning at the AA windows in Old Main, according to dance co-chairmen William Dietrich and John Matternas. Students are urged to purchase their tickets as early as possible to insure entrance to the “no cor sage” dance which features a Spring theme. Extra dancing space has been provided by abandoning the fra ternity booth system. Added chairs will also be located throughout Rec Hall to increase the seating capacity for Senior Ball guests. Featured with “the man who plays,the.sweetest trunapet in the world,”, are the Stardreamers. Spivak, before forming his own .band,' was, rated' as the most sought-after free-lance' trumpeter in the country. After forming his own outfit, (Continued on page eight) Biography Book Appears af SU Initial issue of “Who’s Who in the News” at Penn State will be released Tuesday, according to Stephen Sinichak, editor of the new book published by Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi. Students whose biographies ap pear in the book and who are eligible to receive the bopk may pick up their two copies at Stud ent-Union on Tuesday by signing for them. Details for purchasing extra copies ■of Who’s Who will be mentioned later, the editor added. Distribution will be made to all departments of the College, to the leading newspapers of the Commonwealth and to all col leges and universities of the state. Copies will also be mailed to each fraternity and sorority in State College and to those stud ents who are entitled to copies and have left the College. The publication, which lists 249 students, serves to give re cognition to them for their ef forts in campus activities. (Continued on page eight) News Briefs Engineering Lecture Probst Elliot Dunlop Smith of the Carnegie Institute of Tech nology will apeak on the topic “Personnel Management” at the Senior Engineering Lecture in 121 Sparks at 4:20 o’clock today. Gamma Phi Beta Gamma Phi Beta celebrated its fifteenth anniversary on campus last week-end. Activities included an alumnae open house, a banquet at the Allencrest, a Yacht Party, and a buffet luncheon. Far East Talk “The Bible and Archeology” will be the subject of a talk by Dr. Francis Steele at 304 Old Main, 4 p.m. Sunday. Dr. Steele, an authority on archeology in the Far East, will be the guest of the Penn State Bible Fellowship. WEATHER Cloudy and Showers PRICE FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers