page Form Sororily Pledges To Be Honored at Pan-Hellenic Tea Plans arc being completed dur ing this week for the Panhellenic Pledge Tea to be held in the main lounge of Simmons from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday. Roslyn McCollom and Peggy DeJure are co-chair men of the affair. In previous years each sorority pledge class held a tea and in vited on the average of two rep resentatives from each other sorority pledge class to attend. This led to a season full of nine teen pledge parties. Panhellenic Council, in order to eliminate the undue expenditure of money and waste of time, decided this year to adopt a plan for having one large pledge tea which all pledges of all sororities would attend. Co-chairmen of a committee to work out such a plan were se lected and arranged a meeting of one pledge and one active from each sorority to discuss plans for the tea. Each sorority through its representatives was asked to serve on a committee to help plan the tea. All complied and a report of the progress of the com mittee was given by Miss DeJure at the last meeting of the Panhel Council. Members of Panhel have de cided that all pledges from every sorority must attend the tea. In addition, one active from each chapter who served on the mass committee is welcome at the tea, although attendance by other sorority actives is discouraged be cause of the large number of persons involved. WRA Resumes Intramurals WRA Intramural sports will be resumed tonight with basketball and bowling again getting under way. On the basketball court at 7:00 Kappa Alpha Theta will meet Theta Phi Alpha while Simmons Hall battles with Delta Zeta. At 8:00 Kappa Delta and Gamma Phi Beta wil meet along with a game between Co-Op and Alpha Xi Delta. ' The bowling alleys will be busy once more when the Thetas meet Simmons Hall, the Alpha Xi Del tas meet the Gamma Phis and Nittany Co-op meets the DZs. Referee’s Course Begins for Women A meeting of all women stu dents interested in taking the bas ketball officiating course will be held in 103 White Hall at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The first part o! the meeting will be devoted to a discussion of rules and officiating techniques. At 8 p.m. there will be a demon stration of officiating, also the dates for the written and practi cal ' examination will be an nounced. Women attending are advised to have a copy of the cur rent basketball rules. CLASSIFIEDS All classified advertisement* must be in by 12 :l)0 p.m. day proceeding issue. Prices are 40c one insertion; $l.OO. three insertions: 17 words or less. AH words over 17 three for 5c for each insertion. Call Collegtnn 6711. 111.ACK I’AHKKH 51 PKN with gold top ln't wrelv pnvcdinir Christmas vacation Pl**nsf fall It.2b (toward. FOR SALE I UAll l.lt I Olt S\I.K. K.Mvllent condition, i .•as.-naMe pru t-, immediate occupancy. 1 1 iqu ire 75 !. Wimlcrtbt. Size !). Call tiordie 4928 SK I HOOTS. MISCELLANEOUS IVPINti and done reas-on iJily and ijui Tly. Sorrel a rial service, ro* m 2ni. Stale Hotel, above the itit. {‘hone 19'Mj. PRINTING Muliiliihing Addressograph Service COMMERCIAL PRINTING C.lennland Bldq. Phone 6662 ■THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Engagement A Fish——Evans The engagement of Marjory Evans to Howard MacFarland Fish, Jr., took place over the hol iday vacation. Miss Evans, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, is a sophomore in Edu cation. Her fiance is a sophomore in pre-medical at Princeton Uni versity. Wilson —Magas Mary Magas, Kappa Alpha Theta, became engaged over the holidays to Robert Downs Wilson, Jr., a senior in Commerce and Fi nance. Miss Magas is a senior in Arts & Letters. Wilson is a mem ber of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra ternity. McCloskey—F orncr ook Ann Forncrook, a senior in Physical Education, became en gaged New Years Eve to William McCloskey, a senior in Dairy Hus bandry. Miss Forncrook is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta and McCloskey is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. LeFevre—Skraban Lillian Skraban, Kappa Kappa Gamma, recently became en gaged to Ted Le Fevre, a mem ber of Delta Upsilon fraternity. Miss Skraban, a senior in Medical Technology, is treasurer of Pan- Hellenic Council. Le Fevre, who was graduated last spring from the College, was active in campus politics and a member of Thes pians. He is now employed by the DuPont Company in Wilmington, Delaware. f \AJeclclin gd Kimball—Browner Announcement has been made of the marriage of Marie Evelyn Browner of Cotton Plant, Ark., to Vernon Leroy Kimball, Jr., of Little Rock, Ark., in the Univer sity Baptist Church of State Col lege, December 23. Rev. Robert Eads officiated at the ceremony. The bride was dressed in a wine suit and carried a white Bible with an orchid marker. The church was deco rated with white snapdragons and Christmas greens. A reception was held after the ceremony by Violet Brughelli and Teresa Spinelli at the home of Dr. W. M. Smith, Jr., associate professor of home economics. Mrs. Kimbell is a graduate stu dent at the College, and her hus band is a junior electrical engi neering student at the Univer sity of Arkansas. NSA ~~ Continued from page one support by all Pennsylvania col leges for the Fair Educational Practices bill, which will come before the legislature this month. Elsie Bowmar, Beaver College, outlined the program for the Cul turale which PRUSNSA will sponsor on April 22 and 23 in the Met Theater, Philadelphia. This program will be the first inter collegiate music festival in Penn sylvania. A budget of $7,000 startled many of the delegates but was adopted. .Advisor,- for the af fair are Dr. Frederick Gruber, of the University of Pennsylvania, who is director of the Penn Cul tural Olympics, and Dr. Robert L. Johnson, president of Temple University. Beaver College is headquarters for the Culturale, in which at least 40 schools will par ticipate. Student Loan Fund Terry Comiskey, St. Vincent’s College, outlined plans for the establishment of a student loan fund proposed by the student economic welfare workshop. In formation to be collected by the clinic on scholarship opportuni ties in the region will be sent to the national office and to state educational agencies for distribu tion to all high schools. Campus NSA committees were requested to publicize state senatorial schol arships in their apeas. Walt Morton, Lehigh Univer sity, who headed the international affairs workshop, proposed that NOW GOING ON! ANNUAL WINTER Clearance STOREWIDE CLEARANCE! Listed below are only a few of the many specials. This event is the one the WISE shoppers wait for; it's the sale that offers the greatest savings. Take advantage of this opportunity now IT WILL NOT BE REPEATED! MEN'S SHIRTS .leg. 3.95 & 4.50 now Reg. 4.95 & 5.95 now SUITS Reg. 39.50 now 31.75 Reg. 47.50 now 36.75 Reg. 60.00 now 44.75 Reg. 75.00 now 54.75 SWEATERS Reg. 4.95 now 2.95 Reg. 6.95 now .... • 3.95 Reg. 8.95 now 4.95 Reg. 9.95 now 5.95 PRUSNSA attempt to place as many “displaced persons” stu dents as possible in this region. In effect, this program means that NSA will sponsor the educa tion and living expenses of DP students through funds raised on each campus for its adopted DP. The convention closed with re ports from special committees on policy and ways and means. Policies and proposals adopted by the conference will be referred to member colleges and univer sities for implementation by cam pus NSA committees. , Debate Continued from page one question, “Resolved, that the fed eral government should adopt a policy of equilizing educational opportunities by means of an nual grants.” The debates will be cross examination style. Mr. William W. Hamilton, as sistant speech professor, will ac company the team on the Phila delphia trip. Bowls Claim Continued from page three West Shrine game at San Fran cisco. Cooney ran in the offensive backfield as well as holding down his usual defensive post, and Si mon, playing at the guard posi tion, recovered a Western fumble 3.95 STATE COLLEGE TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1949 to set up the initial Eastern touch down. Incidentally, the South defeated the. North, 24-14. while the East slipped by the West, 14-12. SPORT COATS Reg. 25.00 now 19.75 Reg. 29.50 now • 22.75 Reg. 35.00 now 28.75 Topcoats and Overcoats Reg. 45.00 now 33.75 Reg. 50.00 now 38.75 Reg. 58.50 now 43.75 Reg. 75.00 now .. 54.75 SLACKS Reg. 11.95 now 7.95 Reg. 12.95 now 9.75 Reg. 14.50 now 11.25 Reg. 16.95 now 12.95
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers