FRIDAY. APRIL 4 r 1952 Miss Penn State Entries Extended The deadline for entries in the Miss Penn State contest has been extended from 12 noon Saturday until 12 noon Tuesday, James Gef fert, chairman of tile Spring Week committee, announced yesterday*. : — ~ The move was made, Geffert 1 said, so that more campus groups i could enter contestants. , •The five finalists for the con test will be chosen by movie star Don Tfcylor. The winner will reign as queen over this year’s Spring Week activities, with the other four finalists comprising her court. 1 ■ Klopp to Be Entered In addition, the finalists chosen by Taylor will he entered ,in a nation-wide contest being con ducted by Max Factor' & Co. to discover the girl who best per sonifies the “fresh, young, nat ural American look.” 'The national winner of the Max Factor contest will be crowned “The Max Factor Girl” at a spe cial coronation ceremony in. Hol lywood. Barbara Klopp, last year's Miss Penn-State, will also.be'ehr tered in the contest, Geffert said. The winner of the national con test will receive a scholarship' of $lOOO to be used for the advance ment of her education, an all expense-paid one-week stammer vacation for two in Hollywood;, and 12 other prizes. These include a 17-jewel diamond and gold Wrist watch„ a portable record ' player, and 25 albums of records ■ (phis a professional recording audition if the winner has talent as ,a singer), a three-piece set of lug gage, a portable typewriter, . a table model radio, and ari orchid corsage every _month for a year Final 'Hedda' Shows Henrik Ibsen’s ‘Hedda Gab ler’ will go into its final week end at Center Stage tonight. Tickets may be purchased at the Student Union desk in Old Main. They are 90 cents for to night and $1.25 for tomorrow night. Wylie Chosen Dairy Queen For 1952 Show Anne Wylie was chosen Dairy Queen last night by members of the Dairy Science Club and will reign at the Dairy Exposition to be held at the College May 10. Miss Wylie, sponsored by Alpha Zeta, was one of three finalists in the contest. Other finalists were Ann Chandler, sponsored by Delta Delta Delta, and Edna Gra biak, sponsored by the Block and Bridle club. The brown-eyed .brunette is a freshman in secondary'education. This is her second beauty title. She was crowned Snow Queen at an annual Snow Dance’ held in Summit Hill last December. Her main interests are music, dancing, and swimming. Miss Wylie will be crowned at the dairy show by Charles Bro sious, manager of the . show. She will present the prizes at the show and will reign at a banquet that evening. 3 Teams Win WRA Bridge Alpha Epsilon Phi .was the winning team on the east-west side in WRA bridge and Leonides and Chi Omega tied for first place on the north-south side. All three teams emerged with 31 points. Joan New and Judy Dessen were representatives .of Alpha Epsilon Phi. Alison Mor ley and Clara Thiesson played on the Leonides team and Carol Warner and Mary Elliot repre sented Chi Omega. Robert Baer, president of the Penn State bridge club, super-' vised the playi n g. Duplicate hands were used for the second week. Scores do not • actually mean anything when these hands are used, Baer explained. They are merely comparative since all the teams are playing the same hands. The hands are a test of skill rather than luck. Kalson Elected President Of Journalism Honorary New officers of Theta Sigma Phi, women’s professional jour nalism fraternity, are Phyllis Kal son, president; Julia Ibbotson, vice president; Joanne Williams, recording secretary; Alison Mor ley, corresponding secretary; La- Vonne Althouse, treasurer; Constance Matlavage, matrix milestone chairman; and Rita Ar menis, keeper of the archives. The -TAVERN MENU. Friday ; April 4 FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP AND SCALLOPS ' LOBSTER TAIL. \ SWISS STEAK PRIME STEAKS DINNER 5 - 7:30 p.m. Reservations after 6:30 ;■ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN.-. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Entries Taken at SU. While in Hollywood the winner will tour a motion picture studio, witness radio and television broadcasts, and dine at several of- Hollywood’s famous restaurants and night clubs. To enter the Miss Penn State contest a- five by seven portrait must be submitted to the Student Union desk in. Old Main by some campus organization. The entry must also include the name of the sponsoring organization, full name of the contestant, and her age, height, College address, and hometown address. Rhea White Shows Daily Improvement The condition of Rhea White, Penn State Coed who was hurt in an automobile accident last month, was said to be good and improving daily, the Associated Press reported last night. Dr. Frank J. Amodio, her phy sician, said he does not know when she will be discharged from the Crouse-Irving Hospital in Syracuse, N.Y. He added that she must stay off her feet for at least two more weeks. Miss White was injur'ed in a car-truck collision on an icy road near Syracuse. | Treat Your Folks f I At Home ( 1 . vvif/i 1 | . Easter Candies 1 | - , % ; /fO/7Z | 1 . CrOSS - | 1 Eggs teamed 3 FFee " | I We : Matty Candy Any' Where | |. v ’ Goss• CaijdyyShop^' ■' -::143 Allen Street | 3imiiimimimiiiiimiMiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiumiOiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiuiiin Band Day Tickets Available . Tickets for' the fifth annual Pennsylvania Collegiate Band Festival to be held April 19 in Recreation Hall' are now on" sale at the Student Union desk in Old Main. -The-tickets are $1 apiece. • Twenty-three members of the Penn State-Blue Band will be among the 123 students from 23 colleges ■ who will participate -in the festival.' A four-man board of collegiate band directors selected the participants" from entries sub mitted' by each college I .' Exper ience; type . of instrument; w and : ability • rating' given by each col lege band director were used as the basis for selection. James W-. Dunlop, associate professor- of music education, will act as :host for' this year’s festival. Dunlop, a, member of the Penn sylvania College' Band Masters Association', which sponsors., the festival, was.secretary-treasurer of the association two years ago! . Registration, for the festival will be from 4 to 7:30 p.m. April 1.7 ip the first floor lobby of Car negie 'Hall. -The first rehearsal will, follow that night. Additional rehearsals are scheduled, for 'Fri day-. atld' Saturday, preceding the 'concert Saturday- night. • The., first liitetcollegiate Band Festival was helpl in 1948 at Lock Haven State ' Teachers’ College. Since' that time the festivals have b'een- :at Indiana- State Teachers’ College, Carnegie Institute of Technology, .and- Lehigh ■ Univer sity. Kennard Resigns To Do Research William C. Kennard, instructor in pomology,-- has resigned from .the . staff of the. College to accept a-position as horticulturist for ;the •United' States Department of Ag riculture at the• federal experi ment station at Mayaguez, Puerto Rico.; •• Kennard received his 'mas ter’s .degree at the College in '1948 and has been. on the staff since that time. He will leave early in April to assume his new duties, which include research in tropical and sUb-tropical plants. Eads to Address Lutheran Meeting The Rev. Robert H. Eads will talk on the philosophy-and teach ings of Roger Williams in the last of a series on great religious phil osophers at 8:15 tonight at the Lutheran Student Association, 412 W. College avenue. The Rev. Eads is minister to the local University Baptist Church. After' the discussion, Lutheran students will prepare food, for their cabin party at Watts Lodge Weekending With the Greeks Want to go to Greenwich-Vil lage? Or maybe you would like to go back to the days of the Buccaneers. Still another possi bility would be a jaunt to a cute cafe. Three fraternities will be dec-j orated tonight to set - moods to suit such a variety of tastes. Scenes in the. Village will be depicted at the Alpha Epsilon Pi party. Jack Jenkins and his or chestra will supply the music. ' Cafe tables and the music of Freddv Evans will add atmosphere to the Pi Lambda Phi semi-for mal dance. A pirate ship will anchor at the Phi Sigma Delta house. All hearty souls may attend the open affair. 4 Ex-Students Now in Army Four former Penn State stu dents are now serving with the armed forces. • Cpl. Frederick E. Holly, a for mer Daily Collegian sports writer, is now •an assistant to the bat talion historian of the 321st Sig nal Battalion in Germany. Pvt. George B. Hafer of Easton has completed processing at Fort Meade, Maryland. He has been assigned to the _ Third Armored Division at Fort Knox for basic training. Pvt. James W. Rooney is par ticipating in Exercise Long Horn in Texas, the largest maneuver to be held in the United States since World War 11. Pvt. Gene S. Weeber, 25, for mer student from Berks Co., Pa., has complied processing at -the -2053d Reception Center at Fort Meade, Md., and is assigned to the sth Infantry Division, Indian town Gap Military. Reservation for Army basic training. Lt. Cmdr. Bigelow To Leave Active Duty Lt. Cmdr. Richard L. Bigelow, USNR, assistant professor of nav al science, will'be released from active duty in Jpne, the Depart ment of Naval Science has an nounced. Bigelow, the only reserve offi cer .on the staff at. the present time, will return to his law prac tice in Hazelton. You can't wear a diploma around your neck, but \ you can wear a GLASS RING Ba If OU at the ‘A’ Store Elections For PSCA Start Today Voting in the Penn State Chris tian Association elections begins today and will continue until Tuesday. Jane Ifft and Allen Marshall are vieing for the presidency of the organization. Only members of the PSCA are eligible to vote and must present their member ship cards to do so. Voting takes place in PSCA headquarters be tween 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. today, Monday and Tuesday, and be tween 9 am. and 12 npon tomor row. Nominees for the vice presi dency are Robert James and Rob ert Keener; for secretary, Patri cia Jones and Elizabeth Bortz; and for treasurer, Charles Douds, Richard Smith, and Warren Hom mas. Committee chairman nominees are LaVonne Althouse and Shir ley Pritchard, program; David Howell and Merritt Dinnage, fi nance; Kirk Garber, Ruth Freed, and Joyce Gardiner, membership; Nancy Barth, LaVerne Applegate, and David Bain, new students, and Elizabeth Byrem and Doro the.v Osterhout, public relations. Members of the board of direc tors will be selected on a sepa rate ballot. Five will be chosen for three-year terms and four for one-year terms. Three local min isters will be elected to' board membership and two students will be chosen to represent stu dent interests. Mineral Ec Group Will Hear Schanz John J. Schanz, instructor of mineral economics, will, speak at a discussion on economics of pe troleum marketing at 4 p.m. to day in 213 Mineral Sciences build ing. The discussion is the 10th in a series sponsored by the mineral economics division of the School of Mineral Industries as part of its spring seminar. The basic topic of the seminar is “Petrol eum and Related Technologies.'’ Both faculty and students of all divisions of the school are invited to attend the discussion New! Superior! Glamorous! Silk-Film make-up foundation blended with real silk! SILK-FILM ... the fabulous new silk-in-cream foundation that’s inake-up news! ■ Gives your skin the look of silk! The feel of silk! No coarseness to cake ~. it smooths on more quickly ... evenly ... easily! Lighter feeling, too. Marvel at the magnetic way powder clings hours longer. In brilliantly designed palm a fitting disc to carry in your purse. 1.25 plus tax In six skin-glorifying shades, McLanahan’s PAGE FIVS