PAGE TWO 55 Coeds Are Entered In Miss 'State' Contest The portraits of 55 coeds who have been entered in the 1952 Miss Penn State contest have been sent to Hollywood where motion picture star Don Taylor will chodse the five contest finalists. Final judging of the finalists will take place on May 12, when the winner will be crowned Miss Penn State of 1952 at a special coronation ceremony in Schwab Auditorium. Barbara Klopp, last year’s contest winner, will bestow the crown on the new queen who will then reign over the ensuing Spring Week activities. Three judges have been chosen so far for the final judging, Janet Herd, coronation director, said yesterday. Martha Nold of the Grace Down Model and Air Ca reer School in New York, Norma West of the Barbizon Studio of Fashion Modeling in New York, and Charles Petnick, owner of the Charles Shop, have agreed to act as judges in the contest. The women entered in the con test and their sponsors are: Nancy Bailey, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Andree Bloom, Delta Gamma: Carole Campbell, Alpha Epsilon Pi; Cassandra Caraway, Beta Theta Pi; Sylvia Crum, Alpha Chi Rho; Nancy Dahl, Penn Haven Club; Eugenie Deger, Zeta Tau Alpha; Catherine Foglia, Delta Zeta; Susan Fores man. Sigma Phi Alpha. Nancy Graham, Alpha Omicron Pi; Marion Gray, Earth Science Club; Eleanor Griffith, Theta Kappa Phi: Delores Han son, Zeta Tau Alpha; Patricia Hathaway, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Helen Hedge, Chi Omega; Margaret Hepler, Alpha Chi Omega; Theresa Horrigan, Delta Gam ma; Avis Hummel, Delta Gamma. Grayce Hope Jeffries, Phi Mu; Mar garet Kerr, Sigma Pi; Joan Lee, Delta 1 Zeta; Shirley Long, Zeta Tau Alpha; Jean Mastin, Delta. Tau Delta; , Peggy May berry, Thespian Club; Diane'Miller, Alpha Gamma Rho; Nancy Moncton, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Elizabeth Morgan, Delta Gamma; Carolyn Morris, Omega Psi Phi; Patricia Morris, Pi Kappa Alpha. Mae Moses, Kappa Alpha Theta; Kath erine Nicoll, Delta Zeta; Barbara Norton, Phi Delta Theta; Joan O'Connor, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Carolyn Pelczar, Chi Omega; Jean Phillips, Phi Kappa Sigma; Nancy Queer, Sigma Nu; Ann Quigley, Liberal Arts Student Council; Antoinette Rauseo, Theta Phi Alpha. Louise Robertson, Alpha Tau Omega; Virginia Schan, Alpha- Xi Delta; Nancy Scofield, Phi Gamma Delta; Ann Ser watka, Nittany Dorm 29; Joanne Sheets, Alpha Sigma Phi; Nancy Showers, Sigma Chi; Betsy Siegler, Gamma Phi Beta; Sylvia Silver, Phi Sigma Delta; Ruth Springman, Pi Kappa Phi. Mary Alyce Strom, Kappa Alpha Theta; Joann Terhune, Kappa Delta: Bettie Thomas, Delta Gamma; Shirley Thornton, Delta Gamma; Anna Mae Webb, Alpha Xi Delta; Diane White, Delta Gamma; Marian Whitely, Phi Kappa Tau; and Bernice Yerkes, Beta Sigma Omicron. Treble Group To Present Spring Concert The Treble Singers, under the direction of Elmer C. Wareham Jr., instructor in music, will pre sent their annual spring concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. Doors, will open at 2:30 p.m. The 134 women in the chorus will sing 16 numbers in four-part harmony. The program will include “Some Folks” (Foster), “Last Night the Nightingale” (Kjerulf), “Could My Song On Wings Go Flying” (Hahn), “Now Is the Month of Maying” (Morley), “My Heart It Seemed Was Dying” (Palestrina), “A Merry Madrigal” (Read), “A Snow Legend” (Clokey), “Sleigh Ride” (Parish &nd Anderson), “Rise and Shine” (Youmans and Sgloo). “Jesus Walked This Lonesome Valley” (Dawson), “Let My People Go” (arr.-Scott), a medley of three hymns, “I’m Falling In Love With Someone” (Victor Herbert), “A Wonderful Guy” and “Oklahoma” (Rodgers-Ham merstein). Engineering Lecture J. O. Peirine of American Tel ephone and Telegraph Co. will lecture at 4 p.m. today on “Crafts men Versus Artists” to all stu dents enrolled in Engineering, 3. Student Clinic -- (Continued from, page-one) will be a session featuring dis play explanations and a general discussion. Student affairs including fresh man orientation, publicizing and promoting student government, honor systems, faculty rating pro grams, NS A, and student govern ment will be discussed at the three workshop" tomorrow morning and afternoon and Sunday afternoon. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 'riesfly Lecturer Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy Kennedy To Speak On Atoms . 'Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy, chair man of the Department of Chem istry at i Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., will deliver the 26th annual series of Priestly lectures which begin Monday and continue until Friday. The sub ject for the five lectures will be “Radioactive Atoms and Isotopic Tracers.” The Priestly lecture series was founded at the College in 1926 in honor of Joseph Priestly, a noted English chemist and physi cist who came to this country and lived at Northumberland, Pa. A leading scientist is presented annually to lecture on a subject that is bordering between physi cal chemistry and another field. Dr. Kennedy was the chemistry and metallurgy leader at the Los Alamos Laboratory prior to his present position. He was awarded a merit medal for his work on the Manhattan project. Osborne Art Work Now on Display Nearly 100 drawings and paint ings, including oils, water colors, pencil sketches and pastels, are being exhibited at the Schlow Gallery, S. Atherton street, this week. The paintings and drawings were done by Milton S. Osborne, head of the Architecture depart ment, and Mrs, Osborne, and rep resent travels through the United States and Europe. The works have been shown in galleries in Canada and the United States, Architectural drawings by Os borne have previously been shown at the National Gallery of Can ada, Brooklyn Museum, Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and other prominent galleries across the country. fndependents Plan Dance An independent dance, spon sored by the Association of In-' dependent Men and Leonides, will be held from 9 p.m. to mid night tonight in ,the West Dorm lounge. Music will be provided by the Campuseers and no ad mission will be charged. Kahn to Speak Tonight Rabbi Benjamin Kahn will use “The Battle of the Warsaw Ghet to” as his subject at Sabbath Eve services at 8 tonight at the Hillel Foundation, 133 W. Beaver ave nue. Kitzmiller Finds Honors, Thrills At NISA Meeting A ring-side seat at her first earth quake, and semi-finalist honors were the reward of'Mary Anne Kitzmiller, Penn State’s first Independent Sweetheart, who attended the National Inde pendent Student Association con vention last weekend at the Uni versity of Oklahoma. Miss Kitzipiller was one of 35 contestants vying for the title’ of National Independent Sweetheart of 1952. She was among 18 chosen as semi-finalists. “We got there just in time for an earthquake,” she said. Miss Kitzmiller recalled that the earth quake gave much the same sen sation, as the train on which she had been traveling for two days to reach the convention. Activities for Miss Kitzmiller at the convention included inter views on Friday morning, the contest, and the Coronation Dance Saturday night. Patricia Berry of Purdue Uni versity was crowned National In dependent Sweetheart at the dance. Square Dance at TUB The Clover Club will hold a square dance from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight tomorrow at the TUB. Dances will he by Chaun cey Lang. Donations .will be ac cepted. fotTh New Aviation Cadet Program Offers Special Advantages To College Men Now Preparing for Military Service Here is valuable postgraduate training that money can’t buy! As an Aviation Cadet you can receive instruction and training worth thousands of dollars —at the same time you are serving your country. You can choose— immediately—between being a Pilot or Air craft Observer in America’s swiftly expand ing Air Force. The Air Force encourages candidates to stay in school and graduate.. Seniors and students with two years or more of college who anticipate early en trance into military service can receive un matched training in flying and leadership for the years ahead. WHO MAY APPLY AGE—Between T 9 and 26Vi yeart. EDUCATION—At least two years of college. MARITAL STATUS—SingIe. PHYSICAL CONDITION—Good, especially eyes, ears, heart, and teeth. HOW TO QUALIFY WHERE To Get More Details Visit your nearosf U. S. Air Force Base or (/. S. Army— If. S. Air Force Recruiting Station or write direct to Aviation Cadet, Headquarters, U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C Dormitory Explained Russell Clark, director of- housing, gave a brief explanation of the financial system of the College compared with other educational institutions and explained the operating procedures of the College housing service last night at a meeting with the Dean of Men’s advisory committee. Expressing his approval of the College’s dormitory' system, Clark said Pollock Circle, the most inexpensive of the dorm areas, is something of which to be proud in comparison with the living quarters of 'some Western and Middle Western institutions. He explained that the Pollock Circle dormitories were given to the College and therefore did not cost anything to build Clark said the new dormitories were financed with money bor rowed frim the state’s retirement fund. The retirement fund, he explained, required investments which would bring in a four per cent interest rate. The decision to use this money was based on the idea that it would aid the taxpayers and the'employees of the state. The building of the Nittany dormitories, he said, was limited by the allotment of steel. Un official plans for the future in clude construction of new dormi tories for the Pollock Circle area, he said. The College, Clark said, incur red a debt of $16,300,000 in build ing the Nittany dormitories, the faculty housing facilities at East I. Take transcript of col lege credits and copy of birth certificate to your nearest Air Force Base or Recruiting Station. 2. Appear for physical examination at your near est Air Base at Govern ment expense. by Clark View, Simmons .Hall, McElwain Hall, and the three new dormi tories in the West area. . He said the College established a good credit rating when it cleared a housing debt, which was to be paid in 14 years, in a seven year period. The 14 year bill was to be paid off at the rate of $lOO,OOO, plus interest, per year. Fiesta Tonight At Phi Kappa Dances of the Americas will be played and taught at the Fiesta at 9 tonight at Phi Kappa in cele bration of Pan American Day. The affair is openHo the public and no admission will be charged. Since April 14, the day nation ally celebrated, fell during the College’s spring vacation, the Pan-A m er i c a n Day committee planned activities that began last week' and will end with lectures by South American students next week. H* 3. Accomplish Flying JS"37™''dw\l ” Aptitude Tests aud pn- I >• list for two years only! food, hoiiaing, FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1952 Housing 4. The Selective Service • Act awards you a four ( month deferment while • awaiting class assign mentl 5. Immediate assign ment to Aviation Cadet Training Classes starting July 19, August 19, Octo ber 2, and November 19, 1952., 7. Graduate, win your wings. Commissioned second lieutenant, begin earning $5,000 a year! Receive $250 uniform al lowance, 30-day leave with pay.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers