SATURDAY, APRIL'2I, 195 i WSGA Td ; Hold Dance In West I^>nTi||dunge The annual Coronation b'all, 7< iirMch’'‘iollows the May day festivi ties on May 12, will be held'in the main lounge of Hamilton hall, it was announced at a meeting^of 1 the WSGA house of representatives last night. The ball, which will and his orchestra, will be held from 9 to 12 admission will be $1 this year. This admits one student couple, but all parents will be.ad mitted free of charge. The main feature toll will ‘be the presentati|fes#gtfhs queen and her court. EnSeEtam ment will be provided Flats and A Sharp. The dance will be a family affair. Card tables- Will be set up to play bridge .-or can asta. . ■ /Sps Colorful Court”:.-;:' r The house also announced,.that this year each class represented in the queen’s court twill jWear gowns of different May Pole dancers will wear peas ant blouses and wide skirts white the Honor Arch will be clad in white. Members of the Hemlock chain will wear pastel gowns. Louise Robertson, maid of honor is wearing pale blue. Teas and open houses will be held from ' 2 to 3 o’clock in the women’s dormitories proceeding the'May day ceremony. .-Men are invited to attend these teas. Leaders Appear In addition to the queen, court, jesters, : heralds, hemlock chain, May' pole • dancers and Honor May Pole dancers and Honor president of WSGA; Mary Ellen Grube, president of WRA; and Lois Keener, representing the Penn State j Christian association^ Will participate in the May day ceremony. The girls who are in the Honor Arch, Hemlock chain and WSGA house decorating committee are required to work in the college greenhouse for two hours the week of. May; day to prepare the hemlock chain and honor arch, the house announced. Home Ec Group To Hold Tea Laura Wing, district counselor of Phi Upsilon Omicron, home economics honorary, will be hon ored , at a tea this afternoon at 2 o’clock at the home of Dr. Win ona Morgan, professor of child development and family rela tions. Mrs. Winn, of Reading, Mass., is currently inspecting the local chapter. The honorary initiated 12 mem bers .at ceremonies last night. The new members are Janet Magrini, Betty Fabian, Susan Foresman, Janet Frutiger, Lois Jakob, Margaret Muth, Elaine Notari, Barbara Park, Carol Reber, Jane Strawn, and Marjorie Telford. Barbara Shick, alumna; was also initiated. : . £ng.ag.ement6 Elder-Lacy Mr. and Mrs. Clair E. Lacy, of Washington, D. C.,' announce the engagement of their -daughter, Phyllis Ann, and Robert L. Elder, also of Washington, D. C. Miss Lacy attended American university and is ,now attending a business college in ' Washing ton. Mr. Elder, a member of Al pha Tau Omega fraternity, is a senior in agronomy. , COLLEGE SENIORS CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION for' VISITORS POSITIONS in the DEPT. OF PUBLIC ASSISTANCE Starting salaries $232&! and $2700 per annum. Eligible lists will be available by June. See examination announce ment and secure application blank at Placement Office- or write State Civil Service' Com mission, Harrisburg; . for .fur ther information. Sitfi V-. /: USH Softball Games Begin .The Women’s intramural soft ball games are . now under way with-, 29 teams participating. . On./, Thursday night Phi Mu walloped Alpha Gamma Delta by aj'/S.core of 20 to 1. Delta Zeta smashed Simmons B 17-0, While Kappa' Delta forfeited to Zeta Tau Alpha. , In the Wednesday night series Alpha Chi Omega defeated Beta Sigma Omicron by a score of 10 to 2. Delta Delta Delta lost to Alpha Xi Delta 9-1. Phi Sigma Sigma forfeited to Delta Gamma. At the beginning of the week Leonides won by forfeit over Theta Phi Alpha. McElwain hall defeated Simmons hall 9-4 and ..he town team forfeited to Mc- Allister hall. 2 Students At AICE Confab Stanford Feigelhan and John Derr, chemical engineering stu dents, will present a paper on “Characteristics o f Protruded Packing for Distillation Appara tus” at the regional* meeting of the student chapters of the Ameri. can Institute of Chemical Engi neers at Bucknell university to day. Dr. D. S. Cryder and Dr. Arthur Rose, both of the department of chemical engineering, will also attend the meeting. Delegations from the Universities of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland,' Pitts burgh, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, Johns Hopkins, and Cath olic university will attend. WRA Installation To Be Held May 1 Installation of the new WRA officers will be held May 1 in White hall at 7 p.m. Invitations have been sent to the. WRA dub presidents, the president of Lakonides, staff members of White hall, members of the election application board, and members of the dean of wo men’s staff. ; Retiring officers and the new officers will hold a rereat on May 29 at the WRA cabin. FRANK LOVEJOY DOROTHY HART “I Was A Communist For The F. 8.1.” DAVID WAYNE TOM EWELL “UP FRONT”' MONTE HALE “VANISHING WESTERNER” THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Independents To Hold Dance In Rec Hall Three bands will be featured at the “Dimensions in Music” semi formal dance which will be spon sored by the Barons and Leonides, tonight from 8:30 to midnight in Recreation hall. The dance is semi-formal. Tickets, priced at $2.50 per couple, will be on sale at the Student union desk in Old Main until noon today. Gene Magill’s dance band, Dar rell Rishel’s jazz combo, and the Polka Kings will provide con tinuous music for the dancers. This is the first time a major campus dance has featured three bands. Unusual decorations will pro vide atmosphere at the affair. A dry ice compound in hot water in the middle of the floor will spread a fine mist over the danc ers. Colored lights, played on the mist, will create a cloudy effect. Magill’s band will play against a backdrop silhouette of a danc ing couple. The bandstand will be a shell. A black screen will be a back drop for Rishel’s combo. A' lu minous piano keyboard will be painted on the screen and the players will have their hands painted with the flourescent ma terial. . The Polka Kings will play against a gray screen sprinkled with multi-colored polka dots. Roberta Reiss and Hank Pitt are co-chairmen for the dance. Committee heads are Joan Went zel and Edvvard Storms, decor ations; Gloria Zack and Robert Parry, publicity; Ruth Aaron and William Cole, printing; Robert Durr and John Laubach, arrange ments; and Douglas Horner, fi nances. Army ROTC Inspected Mon. A board of Army officers from Fort Meade, Md. will conduct a formal inspection for all Army ROTC cadets Monday. Company B, Pershing Rifles, and the ROTC band will conduct a formal guard mount on front campus at 4 p.m. The public was invited to the ceremony by ROTC officers. A conference at 8:30 a.m. be tween Col. Luc i e n E. Bolduc, professor of military science and tactics at the College, and Col. Donald McGrayne, commanding officer of the Inspection board, will be followed by a visit with President Milton S. Eisenhower. The purpose of the inspection will be to observe teaching methods and to study the reten tion of subject matter by the students. STARLITE ON BELLEFONTE ROAD “711 Ocean Drive" Also Selected Short Subjects DRIVE-IN Shows 7 and 9 P. SATURDAY "FIREBALL" MICKEY ROONEY BEVERLY TYLER —plus— "GUN SMUGGLERS" with Tim Holt MONDAY & TUESDAY Edwin O'Brian Joanne Dru Weekending With The Greeks The annual Sigma Nu dock party will be held tonight. The fraternity house is traditionally turned into the interior of a ship., the USS White Star, and a com bo will provide music for danc ing. All guests are asked to come in nautical costumes. The affair will begin with a dinner at 6:30, and at 10 o’clock the party will be open to the public. Kappa Alpha Theta sorority is holding a “Theta Land” dance at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. The dance, which is open, will follow a dinner for the members and their dates at the Nittany Lion inn. Arnie Taylor’s orches tra will play. Decorations in Theta Land will consist of clouds floating through space, stars suspended from the ceiling, and a large kite, the emblem of the sorority, at one end of the room. Each of the pledges will receive a small kite favor. . .Beta Sigma Omicron sorority and Acacia fraternity are com bining their talents at a Moon light Mist ball at the Acacia house. Music will be by the Statesmen. The dance, which is open and will ’last from 9 to 12 will be decorated along a theme of' moonlight. A huge moon will be placed outside the house, and another one within. As at the Theta dance, stars will be sus pended from the ceiling. C^O'^dltd Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Alpha Theta sorority held its scholarship banquet on Wednesday at the Allencrest tea room. The banquet is given an nually for the class having the highest average within the soror ity. This year the seniors were honored. Kappa Delta Kappa Delta sorority enter tained Sigma Pi fraternity at a roaring twenties party on Thurs day night. Delta Delta Delta Five girls from the Penn State chapter of Delta Delta Delta so rority are attending a district con vention of the sorority at the University of Pennsylvania. They include, Lila Barnes, president, Mary Stark, Mary Bambrick, Jan. et Evans, and Cynthia Loesel. FREE! 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Thomas Kingsland, John Knox, Richard Neuweller, Arthur Ros feld, Harold Rousch, James Shultz, William Shomberg, Rich ard Stanley( Alan Sredenschek Benjamin Thompson, Ronald Thorpe, Allan Wampler, Alan Wilson, and Joseph Wirs. Here’s Another New Offer Personal Laundry Service To All 1) Rough Dry Cleaning 2) Pillow Case Special 3) Shirts Laundered PORTAGE CLEANERS 118 S. Puffh St., For Proaopt (in Colder Alley) Service Phone 2G32 ••••. ' • .. NITTANY MONDAY & TUESDAY Presented in Cooperation with Romance Languages Dept. Maurice Chevalier IN, "A ROYAL AFFAIR" A FRENCH FILM WITH ENGLISH TITLES PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers