THURSDAY, .00TOBER " 9, .1952 Seating :Plan: - Vetoed By WSGA Senate'_ The Women's Student 'Government Association Senate last night went, on record as opposing the Recreation Hall seating 'plan with a 5 to 4 vote and one abstention. '. The plan was proposed by Ernest B. 'McCoy, dean Of the School of Physical Education and Athletics and would provide 300 seats in Rec Hall for faculty, graduate students, and alUmni,"- Election of two freshman-sena tots was set for Oct. 28 and '3O with Louise Glud w as chairman of the committee. Rosethm Monack, Eleanor''Horvitz; an d Patricia Bauer are the other committee members. . • The Pennsylvania Week•motor cade, a parade of decorated cars, as proposed bY the - Penna. Week committee, was endorsed by Sen ate. Each" group may enter one car which will be judged at the Homecoming Gam "e with Ne braska. Mrs. Vera Furst, head hostess at. Simmons Hall, has said that she will be .adviser and aid for the Junior-Senior Faculty Recep tion to be held Nov. - 10. Mrs. Furst . has helped with the - recep tion in- previous'( years. Suggest ion boxes for : names of faculty to be invited 'are to be, placed in, each. dormitory -hostess .office. Carolyn' McElroy. is head of the committee for, the •reception. Bar bara Wallace, Joyce Buchanan, Jane Larpenter, Carolyn Pelczar, Ellen Wandel, and Hilda Hoge land, are other members. • Besides the display in. the West Dorm showcase, the WSGA pub licity committee, will advertise two movies 'to be shown 'by Blue Key, junior men's hat society, for Penna. :Week at 7:35 p.m. Wed neSday --in 119 Osmond. -They are movies of the Penn .State-West Virginia. football game and "This Is Penn State." ' The ;proposed amendment in creasing Junior women's 11 o'clock permissions from -four to six per" semester and those of first semes- , ter seniors :from six to :eight was read for -the .firit. time and will be voted on [at next week's meet ing., - Barbara Werts, vice president of Senate;:was.named as WSGA's candidate for' queen of the . Bejle Hop Ball, sponsored by :the Hotel Administration Greeters., Clu b. Je'an Mastin was last year's queen. Mortar '.Boarct Members-of, Mortar - Board, sen ior women's honorary, have again started - their. nightly it s to women in the: College..infirmary. A. different' member, of ;Mortar Board. visits the' hospital -each night - and .buys food ' for those requesting it.. The service is a yearly. project .of ,the honorary. Cikal LEIFS ,i• ittneriCcirt Gee , Society By LIX NEWELL WRA Approves Recreation Hail Seating Pion The Executive Board Of the Women's Recreation ' AssOciation Tuesday night gave its - approval to the seating plan for Recreation Hall which would -make tickets available to 300 - faculty, aluxnrfi, and graduate students. The board recommended that only—Tuesday night Rec Hall events be open to outsiders. Patricia Colgan and Carole Av ery were appointed to . ' the All- College Cabinet project tee by Mabel Marple, WRA. presi dent, and Marie Wagner and Rhea White were named to the blbod ,rnobile committee. . Eleanor Gwynn was appointed to head the "elections committee. The board voted to adopt an other war orphan. - - . A. 12-year-old displaced person living" in in Ger many has been requested. It was also "votedto begin intra mural. play Oct. 29. and. to hold the annual playday, Feb. 21; -• Notr.-9 was set as the date for the WRA ExeCiitive Board re treat. Patricia Colgan will -be in charge of arrangements. iiiiiill COedits Delta TCIU Delta Delta Tau Delta . entertained Al pha Chi Omega Sunday' afternoon. Refreshments were 'Served and dance inusic•was . :Ocniided - by Ed Landes and his orchestra.' Delta Sigma Phi Members of Delta Sigma Phi - will attend .chapel this, Sunday in honor of their, new •initiates. .';'l ... .: ,‘ LI.. T'iLS; :E , ', , ;< .-:T)••• TR EjYAtLY:::COLLEGIA:N, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Davis-Jones Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. JoneS of Leighton announce the mar riage of their daughter, Marilyn. to Lt. James Davis, son' of Mr. and Mrs: Clyde Davis of Hunt ingdon. The marriage took place Aug. 2' in 'Leighton. Mrs. Davis: was graduated from the College last June. She was a member of Alpha Chi Omega. ' Lieutenant Davi s also was graduated frOm • the College last June and is a member of Phi Kap pa Sigma:. ..,• Herman-McCormick Nancy McCormick, daughter of , Mr. and Mrs. James McCormick lof Coraopolis, was married Aug. 13 to Charles Herman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Burke I. Herman of coraopolis Heights. : Mrs. Herman wa s graduated. from 'the College last June and is .a member of Alpha Chi Omega: Mr. Herman is an alumna of Bucknell University- and. 'a mem ber of Phi Gamma Delta. Miss Marybert Kincaid, soror ity sister of the bride, was a bridesmaid. Mr. - and Mrs. Herman are now living in Baton - Rouge, La... Free-Conway Sarah Conway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.- David McKee Conway of Erie and Robert Free, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Free, were married Aug. 16 in the' Church of the Covenant in. Erie. . Mrs. Free was a home econorn= ics student in child development and .a member of Alp h a Chi Omega. Mr. Free is a -graduate of the. College and a member of Sig- Hi!lei to Spon,sor 'Modern Israel' Series "Religion in Modern Israel" will be the topic of a discussion group meeting at 8 tonight at the Hillel Foundation. This is one' of a ser-; ies of discussionS f e in Modern Israel" to be held each Thursday night at Hillel. Dina [ Tapper is chairman of the pro -gf am. 1 Tonight's discussion •leaders will be Shmuel Avital. instructor of mathematics and navigation at Haifa Technion Nautical School, Israel, and Dov Graditor, instruc tor of mathematics at Shevach Trade - School, Israel. Both speak, ers, have received State depart= ment teaching- training awards from the College. . . . This fashion fabric has if) rietry ad.:dizinger nlarriad . a. fintroclu,cing LORETTE . . . the amazing new orlon-wool fabric by Milliken the look and light weight warmth you want . . . but just try to put a wrnkle in it! Now you. can have pleats without a worry about keeping them. This dress comes in / • three plaid combin- ations . . . blue, red, or gold with gray and white . . . in a range of sizes. Bolivian Will Teach IFC Dance Classes Rosario de Murillo, a very dark and pretty Latin, has been imported all the way from Bolivia by the Interfraternity Council to teach SpaniSh dancing.' It is incidental that she is here also to study. By the .time the IF.'C Ball rol dent Arthur Rosfeld predicts everyone will be expert' at the rumba, marnbo, samba, tango, bolero, conga, and pasodoble and anybody, who is anybody on cam pus won't dare attempt a con ventional waltz or two-step. With the help of George Don ovan, manager of associated stu dent activities, 2FC plans to start the seven-week coeduca tional dance lessons Oct. 27. Donovan predicts a big turnout, but the class has to be limited to the 'first 200 persons who ap ply at the Student Union desk in Old Main before Oct. 20. "The turnout for the beginners' Cancing classes being sponsored by Mortar Board has been good," Donovan said. "One hundred thirty-seven persons have al ready signed up." The class isn't limited to frat e;nity men, or even to , college students. Faculty and other col lege employees may also join. "All you need is to be willing to learn and not be aware of the people around you at first," Rosario explained in an- inter view this week. There will be five classes of 40 persons each, held Monday through Friday at the TUB. The cost for the series will be $l. When - asked whether teaching 200 persons to dance wasn't gong to be too much for her, Rosario answered. "No, I can take care of them. I love to teach' people to dance." With this, opportunity to loosen up one's sacroiliac and lose one's self-conscipusness and inhibitions, there is just one draw-back. Pretty little Rosario is Mrs. de Murillo. And her husband will be around helping to teach the dance classes. Rosario, standing just 4 feet, 11 inches, is 20 years old. A special student at Penn State now, she attended Connecticut College for Women for two years. Her hus band, a junior in petroleum engi neering, is 5 feet 9 'inches. Rosario has .had lots of ex perience teaching college friends at Connecticut, and has •studied Spanish dancing and ballet in "Sorry, you're the 20th girl we've had to 'turn down." This a painful thing to have to tell a coed who has been asked to submit a portrait for a contest. Specifically we're talking about the Homecoming Queen contest. But this applies to all contests where a photograph is needed. In general, most of the girls were notified much too late to have a portrait made. This has happened a number of • times previously. We decided to use this contest as an example in an attempt to trace the persons responsible for the short notice. But we found too much buck passing and gave it up. Contest officials claimed the contest was . announced quite a while ago, while contestants 'claimed they were notified only a few days ago. We write this in protest - and as a lesson to those responsible for future contests. • If this' one day grace on the Homecoming Queen contest was designed as an aid to ,local photographers, we'd like someone to tell us all about it. We've been turning down girls since last Thursday rather than promise them something we couldn't deliver. Don't you realize that many of these girls can't send home for pictures, and must have one taken up here. And you coeds-, we hope you take - the above advice. There are about 8 or 9 contests each semester. For your own good, if you believe you are contest material, don't wait until the last minute. Sorority. officers, select a girl early enough so She has- a chance to have a portrait made, thus .-assuring her entrance into the contest. No, we don't enjoy turning down sittings, but we have to draw a line somewhere. A :poor rush job or a fine portrait —we offer you the latter. Lion Studio By HELEN LUYBEN s around next spring, IFC Presi- Bolivia and the United States. While at Connecticut. Rosario dated the Coast Guard cadets at the academy across the way. "They were wonderful, but when they started to dance they all stopped talking," she sai d. "I couldn't understand this, and I asked one of them why he didn't talk • . . . was there anything wrong? "He said he was counting. You know . . . one, two, three this way, and one, two the other way. And every time I'd talk to him, he'd get mixed up and step on my feet," • Rosario insists that her stu dents will come out of her class being able to talk while they dance. She is going to teach them to dance to. the music. learn the basic steps, and then forget about them. She might even find enough talent in this Nittany vale to or ganize a troupe and tour the country. At least she hopes some of her class will be able to get together with the Spanish Club and perhaps put on a Latin Amer ican show. She Found Her Heart... After much worry and anx iety over the loss of her gold heart-shaped Locke t, Mar lene Charleston finally fou n d it. Marlene's girl friend Phyllis told her to use a Collegian classified and Marlene followed her wise friend's suggestion. This is what Marlene ran . . "Lost: gold-shaped locket near Simmons, Satur day night. If found, call Marlene in 551 Simmons, Reward!" You, too, can find what you're looking for by plac ing and reading ads in the Daily Collegian Classified Section. (/lA., 1112 Sincerely, Bill Coleman PAGE'FIVE
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