• A Frosh's Answer 4 ' TO Dating , Rule— r ~. r-• : t- Til .ilittitg. i A -;'..';:g. Titt - it 'See Page - 4 , • +655 FOR A BETTER PENN STATE VOL. 53, No. 19 Ratio Rises With 11,460 Enrollment Fall enrollment figures released yesterday by C. 6. Williams, regis trar, list a total 11,460 students. Of these, there are . 8584 men and 2876 women, a ratio of 3.01 men to each woman. This represents a slight increase in the ratio which was 2.91 to 1 last semester. This total includes_lo,ls9 under graduates, 1374 graduate students, and 227 special students. There are 7656 male- and 2509 female undergraduates. The ratio of men to women undergraduates is 3.10 to 1. In the graduate school, 1152 men and 222 women are en rolled. There are 76 men and 151 women special students. Enrollments Listed The School of Liberal Arts has the largest number of students registered, 2603. This includes 1856 men and ;47 women. The smallest enrollment, 268,, is listed for the School of Physical Education, and includes 144 men and 124 women. Enrollment totals listed for other schools are Agriculture, 1410 total, 1291 men and 119 women; Chemistry and Physics, 763,696 men and 67 women; Education, 1148, 404 men and 744' women; Engineering, 943, 928 men and 15 women; Home Economics, 743; 142 men and 601 women; Mineral In dustries, 473, 471 men and two women; and the Division of Inter mediate Registration, 508, 424 men and 84 women. Men Outnumber Women The highest ratio is found in the School of Mineral Industries, 235.5 to 1. In two schools women outnumber the men. Mese are the School of 'Horne Econornics where there are 4.23 women to . very man, and the School of Education, 1.84 to 1. In the remaining schools, men outnuMber women. In the School of Agriculture the ratio is 10.19 to 1; Education, 1.84 to 1; Engineer ing, 61.8 to 1; Liberal Arts, 2.48 to 1; Physical Education, 1.16 to 1; and the Diviiion of. Intermediate Registration, 3.10 to 1. Young GOP's Sponsor Club The Penn State Young Republi can Club will assist in organiz ing - a Centre County Young Re publican Club at 8. tonight in the county court houie_at Bellefonte. The local group 'and the Centre County Republican committee are sponsoring the new club. The meeting will be open to students and persons living in town, Ben jamin Sinclair, president of the local organization, said. Bursar Reports Fees Paid by 95% More than 95_ per cent of stu dents have completed payment of fall semester fees, according to David C.' Hogan,• bursar. Hogan complimented the stu dents on their prompt payments and said this was "the best year ever." He attributed much of the suc cess to a summary of fees which was distributed in the dormitories at the begihning of the semester. Students who have not yet paid their fees will be charged $1 per day for each day until a total of $lO is reached. This sum will be added to the fees. TODAY'S WEATHER 1 - COOKER • WITH SHOWERS i Everywhere You Go . , —Photo by Austin BASEBALL FANS listening intently to the ninth inning of yes terday's World Series game between the Yankees and the Dodgers. The students were gathered around a portable radio that a student had with him on the Mall. The Yanks won, 3-2. Yankees Beat 13urns; Series Goes the Limit BROOKLYN—Vic Raschi and Allie Reynolds double teamed Brooklyn with an 11 strike-out job today to send this homer happy World Series into a seventh game with a 3-2 New York Yankee victory. match _the desperate- Yanks—who Sparks, Willard Study Rooms List Posted Lists of empty rooms in Sparks Building and Willard Hall to be used ' for 'studying during sand wich hours will be posted today by Douglas Schoerke,: Liberal Arts Student Council president. The lists, which were compiled by Philip Greenberg, were pre sented at the council meeting last night. The list of available rooms in Sparks will be posted in the first floor lobby.. The Willard list will be posted in the south end of the basement. Marion Morgan was elected sec retary-treasurer of the council and Lenore Kahanowitz was appointed junior member to replace Ann Quigley who left school. Miss Ka hanowitz had the highest number of votes among the junior losers in the spring elections. Richard Kirschner will head a committee to study a faculty eval uation program for the Liberal Arts school. Other members of the group include Carol Adler, 'John Carpenter, Otto Hetzel, Watson Leese, Katlirine Reynolds, ari d Donald Seigle. • Greenberg was appointed chair man of a committee to work out a vocational guidance program. Walter Back, Larry Gedrich, Don na Symonds, and Bruce Wagner will assist hith. George Allison and Eliza Newell will work on a plan to have rep resentatives from different clubs affiliated with the school speak to the council. Schoerke, William Slepin, coun cil parlimentarian, and Back will rewrite the council constitution. Radio Recruits to Meet Students .interested in the technical and programmingas pects of a campus radio station will meet to organize a com mittee at 7 tonight in 204 Old. Main. STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 7, 1952 Two tremendous home runs by Duke Snider weren't enough to .fought-back tie :the--series-for the third time. After the game, Dressen said, "It'll be my big man, Black, to inori'ow." The seventh and final game will be played at Ebbets Field today with the possibility that Rey nolds and Joe Black of the Dod gers may meet for a third time. Black was the victor in the first game but Reynolds triumphed in the fourth. Beth are ,right-handed throwers. Yogi Berra and Mickey Mantle ripped into 22 year old Billy Loes for homers and Raschi provided the other run with a single that bounced off Loes' left knee and rolled into short right field, scor ing Gene Woodling in the two run seventh. But Manager Casey Stengel, struggling to keep alive his dreams of a fourth straight world championship, had to call in Rey nolds to save the fast tiring Raschi in the eighth inning. Snider's second homer of the day and fourth of the series— tying records held by Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruthz—slashed the Yank (Continued on page eight)_ Appointment of Lowther Approved by Trustees Appointment of John D. Law ther to the newly created post of assistant dean of the School of Physical Education and Athletics in charge of resident instruction was approved Friday by the executive committee of the Board of Trustees. The — position was created to consolidate and strengthen the administrative functions of th e school, according to Er n e.s t B. McCoy, dean of the School of Phy sical Education and Athletics. McCoy added that the position was created to lay the ground work for more efficient opera tion in academic fields. Lawther will assume his duties immediately. Serving for 13 years as head basketball co a Lawether re- . Home, Not College tglau Produces Drunks— See Page 4- - Ticket Forms For Penn Game Due Tomorrow Student ticket applications for the Penn State-University of Pennsylvania football game must be mailed to the Penn State Ath letic Association 6:30 a.m. tomorrow to 5 p.m. Thursday according to Harold R. Gilbert, graduate manager of athletics. No applications postmarked earlier than 6:30 a.m will be accepted, however. Special delivery orders will not be ac cepted. Checks or money orders must, be drawn payable to the Penn,' State Athletic Association and for the exact amount of the purchase, he said. Checks and money. orders must have the student's address , ' , he added, May Sit In Groups Tickets cost $3.90 and $2.60 each. If the demand for tickets in a particular price range should exceed the supply, the Athletic Association reserves the right to substitute tickets in the remain ing price bracket or to make all necessary refunds. Students who wish to attend the game as a group should pin applications together. One check or money order can be sent to cover more than one application. Tickets will be distributed from 8:30 a.m. to noon and from. 1:30 to 430 p.m. Oct. 23 and 24 at the Athletic Association ticket office windows in Old Main. Athletic Association books must be pre sented at distribution. Signatures on the books, must match those on applications submitted. One per son may pick up a group of tick ets if he has the books for ticket dentification, Gilbert•, said. - . . Plan To Avoid Line The game will be played Nov. 1 at Franklin Field in Philadelphia. It was explained by the com mittee on seating arrangements that this system was set up in order to avoid the line that form ed in 1948. At this time a line was formed form Old Main to Cook's restaurant (now the Dutch Pan try). Maurice Grdsser To Discuss Art Maurice Grosser, artist and au thor, will speak on "Art, Money, and Painting" at 8 tonight in 121 Sparks. His lecture will be the first in a series sponsored by the division of fine and applied arts of the Department 'of Architec ture, and is open to the public. Grosser, whose works have been exhibited in The Hague, Amster dam ,and Paris, has pictures in the permanent collection of the Mu seum of Modern Art in New York. He is the author of two books, "Painting in Public" and "The Painter's Eye." signed in 1949 to devote his full time to teaching. Last year he took a six-month leave to tour Mexico as a teacher coach for - t h e National Sports Federation. An evening school, founded at Orizaba and dedicated to the fundamentals of basketball, was named in his honor. During this period "Psychol ogy of Coaching," a physical edu cation textbook written by Law ther. was published. Lawther was graduated from Westminster College in 1919 and returned to his alma mater in 1926. During the interval follow ing graduation from Westminster. he taught and coached at high schools in 'OhioPennsylvania, and New York. He came to the College in 1936. IFC Bans Fraternities' Early Bids Freshmen and new students were warned yesterday not to pledge or accept bids for frater nity houses for next semester un til the official pledging dates are announced by Interfraternity Council. IFC president Arthur Rosfeld - Said that students cannot accept bids for next semester until fresh man grades are released. He added that houses cannot legally extend bids until that time. Rosfeld explained that the fra ternity rushing program was not ne of "first come-first serve." He urged freshmen to visit as many of the 52 Penn State fraternities as they could before deciding which house to pledge. Houses which extend premature bids are houses that •must do so without competition to fill their quotas before -the -legal -pledging period begins, he said. The IFC has set ups committee which will contact all freshmen and new students this semester, asking them to list their fraternity preference. The program will get underway Oct. 15 when the maga zine "Penn State Fraternities" is sent to all frosh and new students with the preferential cards. The student will be contacted by that fraternity and rushed. Rosfeld added that if a house is really interested in a student, that student will receive a 'bid during the legAl pledging period and not prematurally. • 4 WD Students Named to AIM Richard Acciavatli, Rob e r t Hance, Robert James, and An drew Jaros were selected last night by the We s t Dormitory Council as temporary representa tives to the Association of Inde pendent Men Board of Governors which meets tomorrow. These men were chosen accord ing to council's decision to send the four members with the high est class standing to th e AIM meeting. Elections were scheduled for the next meeting to be held Mon day night, after a motion to hold elections during last night's meet ing was declared unconstitution al. The council constitution pro vides that officers be elected "within two weeks following the first meeting." 342 Will Receive Skin Tests Today A mass injection will be con ducted today for the 342 stu dents who failed to complete their skin tests, Dr. Herbert•R. Glenn, direct or of College Health Service, has announced. These students are to report from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. to the dispensary, 3 Old Main, for in s. They will report Thursday for the test reading. Students who fail to complete the skin test will be excluded from classes and fined, Dr. Glenn said. FIVE CENTS tomorrow
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