SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1952, Voting Gives State Party Four Ca"..inet Positions State Party members will sit in four of the five. All-College Cab inet seats that were at stake in.the All-College and senior and-junior class elections that ended Thursday. John Laubach, All-College president; James Plyler, All-College • vice president; Theodore Kimmel, senior class president; and Rich ard Lerhyre, junior Class president, will represent the State party on cabinet. Richard Rostmeyer, vic tor of the sole cabinet seat won by the Lion Party, caused the first split in an All-College elec tion since 1948 by winning the office 'of secretary' treasurer. The other victorious State can didateg were Williain 01411ey, senior class vice president and Margaret Hepler, senior class secretary treasurer. The other Lion •candidates who• won were Robert Carruthers, junior class vice president, and Peggy Crooks, junior class secretary treasurer. That student government is be coming stronger in the minds .of the student body .was indicated by the record vote, Carrol Chap man, chairman of the All-College elections committee, said yester'- day. He added that he' was very pleased to see the large number of split - ballots and thought that the final split slate will be a good thing for student ,government. In his statement, Chapman told the students that • their voting duties were not yet over. He re minded them that the student council electionS also play an im portant part in - student govern ment and he said he hoped there would be as large a turnout as there was in the All-College elections. Clark Predicts Men's Housing May Be Scarce A possible scarcity of campus living accommodations for -men was forecast yesterday by Rui sell Clark, director of housing, in announcing the schedule of room reservations for the East dormi tories. _The West Dorm accommoda-. tions for men are filled, he said, and about 14 groups have already reserved assignments in the East dormitories in accord with the group housing plan. Group assignments in both Nittany and Pollock dormitories will continue to be accepted until 5 p.m. Tuesday, after which the depsgtment will begin pro cessing individual applications. Members of the present junior class will be processed Tuesday, sophomores 'Wednesday, and freshmen Thursday. Applications will be accepted from 7 to 9 p.m. each day in' 108 Old Main. The assignment schedule was moved back a day, Clark said, to prevent a conflict, with the Hon ors Day program Monday night' Under the group assignment plan up to 12 upperclasSmen are permitted to apply in a body for reservations in each of the 24 Nittany dormitories and up to 16 for residence in each of the 13 Pollock dormitorid. Assignments will be made in r the East dorm area in order of application receipt, Clark said in indicating a' possible scarcity of ioorris for next fall. Language Lecturer To Speak Monday Lois Boe Hyslop, Romance lan guages lecturer, will speak at 4:15 p.m. Monday in 121 Sparks on ,"Baudelaire on Poe." , Mrs. Hyslop and her husband, Francis E. Hyslop Jr., associate professor of fin& arts, earlier this year completed the work of trans lating an d editing Baudelaire's critical papers in a book called "Baudelaire on Poe." 40: Foundation Students TO Go .on Deputcition Forty/students from the Wes ley Foundation will travel to Methodist churches. in and near Sunbury -tomorrow morning, to •,partiCipate in - church services and present a concert of sacred music. At 4 p.m. tomorrow the Wesley choir will present a - concert of sacred music at the Northumber- I THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Icahn to Speak in Chapel. Rabbi .Benjamin M. Kahn, di rector of the local B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundatfon, will speak 'on ."Who Is the Religious Man?" at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in • Chapel. The' Chapel choir, • under the direction of Mrs. Willa C. Taylor, will sing "Now Let All the Heavens Adore Thee" (Bach), "0 Thou Eternal One" (Delamar te), and "Open Thou Our _Lips" (Rachmaninoff). George Ceiga at the organ will play as prelude "Tiento-Tange Lingua-Fifth Mode" (Cabanilles), as ,offertory, "In ' Thee, Lord, Have I Put My Trust" (Bach), and as postlude Fugue in G Ma 'jor, No. 2 (Bach). This book is a guide to your future Published, by Harcourt, Brace. Now on sale at your local book store. How this book came about They Went -to College is based on a survey sponsored by TIME, whose in terest in this group stems naturally from the fact that most of TIME's readers are college-trained. TIME is written for you and people like you, people like the thousands of graduates of the more-than-a-thousand "American colleges who answered TIME's questionnaire and yev4aled many facets of their lives—from the courses they took, to their religious beliefs. This mountain of data was tabulated and analyzed by Patricia Salter West at the Columbia University Buresiu of Ap plied Social Research, then turned over to'Ernest Havemann, a former editor of TIME and a specialist at making inter esting reading out of statistical material. The result is a book of major impoit ance to everyone.. WAC, WAVE To Address Senior Women WAC Capt. Ruth S. Reenstjerna and' Lt. Margaret Howard of the Naval Reserve will be on campus Monday to speak with all in terested senior women about com missions in the Army and Naval Reserves. Details concerning the officer procurement 'program will be ex plained at an informal meeting at 4 p.m. Monday in the study lounge of McElwain: Hall: Capt. Reenstjerna will be available from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. Monday in 207 Woman's building. To be eligible for a direct com mission, a woman must be single, between the ages of 21 and 27, and a prospective college grad uate. Capt, Reenstjerna will also explain other programs offered by the Army for women with only two years of college. Ferguson to Speak Dr. John H. Ferguson, profes sor of political science, will speak before the State College Kiwanis Club at 6 p.m. Monday in the State College Hotel. Dr. Ferguson will speak on "The United Nations and the Security Council." Woodrow Wilson was born in 'Staunton, Va., in 1856. is subject: How have , college graduates made out? Is it true that our colleges are turning out atheists and radicals? How do graduates stack up against the self made men who battled their way without the help of four years in college—but got a four-year head start in the business world? Are 'they better husbands and wives? Is a sheepskin really worth all the effort? You'll find answers to your future in the answers to these questions, questions that are explored in They Went to' College, TIME's new book about one of America's most influential groups of people, the U. S. college graduates. In its pages, you'll peer into the post-gradua tion'eareers of the ex-Greasy Grind, the ex- BMOC, the ex-All-Around Student and the One Who Just Sat There. How many of them married, how many Seniors May Order Caps and Gowns Graduating seniors may or der cans and gowns next week at the Athletic Store, corner of E. College avenue and S. Allen street. Engineering students ma y order on 'Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday: edu c a tion, home economics, and physical education• students on Thurs day, Friday, and Saturday. Pohl to Address Ag Eng Banquet William Dohl, a 1950 agricul tural engineering graduate, will be guest speaker at the annual student-faculty alumni banquet to be held today at the Lutheran Student Association gymnasium. The Penn State student branch of the American Society of Agri cultural EngineersAs sponsoring the banquet. Professor Emeritus Ralph Blas ingame, form e r head of the Department of Agricultural En gineering, will speak of his ex periences in Puerto Rico while doing consultant work. Phys Ed Faculty Today's faculty meeting of the School of Physical Educa tion and Athletics has been postponed until 7:30 p.M. Mon day. It will be held in 105 Willard. Because its audience represents one of the largest concentra tions of collete graduates reading any major magazine in the world today, TIME, The Weekly NeWSmagazine, undertook the comprehensive study which is the basis of this milestone book. TIM.E.IO g et it Straight Senate (Continued from page one) provide for disciplinary probation. Present regulations .provide only for academic probation, and stu dents held on disciplinary action are either suspended from school or allowed to remain. Disciplinary probation, under the proposals, may be Imposed by the committee on student affairs. Students breaking the provisions of disciplinary probation will be subject to discipline by the Presi dent. A student on probation is not allowed to join any extracurricu lar activity of the College, and may not hold an office, be a com mittee member, or be active in any campus organization. Another proposed change which the Senate will rule on calls for the approval of either the Dean of Men or the Dean of Women of the places for social functions. The present regulations only re quires approval by these offices of locations for dances. Under the same regulation, two adult couples, excluding undergraduate married couple s, shall be re quired as chaperons for all social functions. ?.:60i091Ca I Society The Zoological Society will see movies and hear a talk .on India by Frederick Knipe at 7:15 p.m. Monday in 214 Frear laboratory. Knipe is connected with the Rockefeller Foundation and is doing research on DDT at the College. children did they have, who got divorced, who got the best jobs, what do they think of courses they took? These' are. just a few of the former dark areas of conjecture and folklore lighted up by this unprecedented study. Low-Down on Higher Learning They Went to College is required reading for everybody who wants the real low-down on higher learning. If you're an undergraduate, you'll learn much about yoUr probable future. If you're a college graduate, you'll find out how you stack up agrariSt your peers. If`you're a teacher, you'll discover what has becotne of your students. ' Arid, no matter what your interest, you'll find fuel for plenty of debate in this book. PAGE THREE ,r , o (
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers