WSB Not Stealing Milk Money- See Page 4 VOL. 53, No. 33 Yale Head To Speak At Chapel Dr. Liston Pope, dean of Yale University Divinity School, will speak on “We Privileged. Few” at Chapel services 11 a.m. .tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. An ordained Congregational clergyman, Dr. Pope has ..served as associate pastor at Wesley Me morial Church in High Point, N.C., and as pastor of Humphrey Street Congregational Church in' New Haven, Conn. He presently is a Gilbert L. Stark professor of social ethics and Associate Fellow of Saybrook College in Yale Uni versity. Dr. Pope, who has received de grees from Duke, Yale, and Bos- ton Universities, is author of ‘Millhands and Preachers” (1942) * and “Labor’s Relation to Church and Community” (1947).. as well as editor of “Social Action Maga zine.” He serves as trustee of the Phelps-Stokes Fund, chairman of the Congregational Council for Social Action, vice-president of the American Association of The ological Schools, chairman of the national advisory committee of the student YMCA, and is on the editorial board of “Christianity' and Crisis.” As a part of tomorrow’s serv- ice,. the Chapel Choir will sing “To Thee Jehovah Will I Sing Praises” (Bach) and “Call to Re membrance”' (Farrant). George Ceiga, Chapel organist, will play as prelude “Our Father, Thou in Heaven Above” (Pesters), as offertory “Adagio, Second Or gan Symphony” (Wilder), and as postlude “Canzoha Post II Com munico” (Frescoboldi). Forum Tickets Available Monday Reserved seat tickets for the 1952-53 Community Forum ser ies will be available beginning 1:30 p.m. Monday'at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Season tickets purchased dur ing and after the recent cam paign must be exchanged for a set. of resferved seat tickets. Only holders of reserved seat tickets, not season tickets, will be' ad mitted to Schwab Auditorium for the performances. WRA to Continue Business Activities Business activities of the 56 delegates to the 15th annual three day convention of the Pennsyl vania Division of the Athletic Federation of College Women will continue today in White Hall. The convention, which got un derway yesterday, is centering around workshop discussion' on co-recreational techniques, cor rect • parliamentary procedures, and effective publicity techniques. These topics are being tied in with the theme of the convention, “WRA and its Relation to the Col lege Campus.” First on the schedule today is the second general session of the convention. At the first general session yesterday, Mabel Marple, president of the. Women’s Recre- TODAY'S ' WEATHER CLOUDY COOLER altr Daily ©nil Lions to Test Spartans' 19-Game Win Streak Parties Final nominations and election of. candidates for freshman and sophomore offices will be held by both Lion and State Parties at clique meetings 7 p.m. tomorrow. State Party will meet in 121 Sparks and Lion Party in 10 Sparks. A change in the All-College election code this year requires a majority vote for election of a candidate. Members of the All-College elections committee will check matriculation - cards of students at entrances to the meeting rooms. Students will be checked against a list of "clique members. Only those who have attended previous meetings are eligible to vote at final election of candidates. Preliminary nominations for candidates were held by both par ties Sunday. At that time Lion Party nominated 15 and State Party nominated five. Both par ties elected class clique officers Sunday. State' Party will hold a steer ing committee meeting at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pi Kappa Alpha. Lion Party held a steering com mittee meeting. Thursday night. The State Party freshman clique will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in 10 Sparks. The meeting was called by freshman class clique chair man Sandford Lichtenstien. In an article yesterday the Daily Collegian erroneously reported that John Fink was freshman vice-clique chairman of State Party. Fink is sophomore vice clique chairman. Jack McMeekih is freshman vice-clique chair man. McMeekin and other freshman clique officers will be introduced at the State Party freshman clique meeting Monday night. Guest speaker at that meeting will be All-College President John Lau bach. ' Lion Party announced the selec tion of Thomas Keely as fresh man campaign manager. ation Association and presiding officer of the convention, wel comed the delegates to the cam pus. Following the general session, the parliamentary procedures and publicity techniques - workshops will meet in 3 White Hall and 136 Temporary. Joseph F. O’Brien, professor of speech, will lead the parliamentary procedures discus sion, ,and Edward L. Matill, as sistant professor of art education, will lead the publicity discussions. Workshops will be open to ' the public, Barbara Wallace, chair man of convention arrangements, has announced. After the final general session from 1. to 2:15 p.m. today in 3 White Hall, delegates will par ticipate in athletic competition.. Mary Jane Draper, acting chair man of physical education for women at Ohio State University, will speak at a formal banquet to night at 'the Nittany Lion Inn. Following the’ banquet, a dance will be held at Sigma Pi. Members of the federation’s ex ecutive . board, will hold a com mittee meeting. tomorrow morn ing. Delegates will attend Chapel services in Schwab Auditorium. Delegates; representing - about 30 Pennsylvania colleges and univer sities, will leave campus tomorrow afternoon., ' STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 25, 1952 The crowning of a queen will be the highlight of th'e Belle Hop Ball to be held from 9 to midnight tonight in Recreation Hall. Jim Erb’s Penn State Blue Notes will provide music for the annual informal dance sponsored by the Penn State Greeters Club. The queen will be selected from one of five finalists—Andree Bloom, Jean Krewson, Barbara Patton, Maud Strawn, and Barbara Werts. Student applause and the . judges’ final decision will deter mine the winner. Judges for the contest are Robert Koser, assist ant to the registrar; Richard Bow er, assistant professor in hotel ad- ministration; and Eugene Folmer, secretary of the State College Chamber of Commerce. The queen will receive a round trip weekend to the Penn State- University of Pennsylvania game. She will occupy the Royal Suite of the Penn Sheridan Hotel in Philadelphia. After the game a reception will be held in her honor. At her disposal for the weekend will be a Chrysler Im perial and she is scheduled to have television and radio inter views. Today the five finalists are to be guests- of the State College Hotel at a luncheon prior to the dance. On Sunday the queen and her escort will be the guests of the Eutaw House for dinner. Lo cal merchants are also contri buting to the queen’s prizes. Tickets at $2.40 may be pur chased from a member' of the Greeters Club, at the Student Un ion desk in Old Main,.or 4E Home Economics. Tickets will also be sold at the door at. Rec Hall. " Test Forms-Due Nov. 1 Applications for the Selective Service college qualification tests to be administered Dec. 4 must be postmarked on or before midnight Nov. 1. Applications may be obtained from Mrs. Sara E. Case in the Dean of Men’s office. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE to Name States Take a Ti —Photo by Austin HOTEL ADMINISTRATION majors Thomas Williams. Robert Fogarty, Michael Bassarik, and Joseph Frederick (left to right) parade down Pollock Road in' their' hotel' outfits advertising' to night's Belle Hop Ball. Jim Erb and the Penn State Blue Notes will play for the dance, which is being sponsored by the Hotel Greeters Club. Belle Hop Queen Will Reign Tonight : Get a Belle Choral Director To Launch Recital Series Bass singer Herbert W. Beat tie, associate professor of music, will present the first in a series of faculty recitals at 3:30 p.m. to morrow in Schwab Auditorium. No admission will be charged for the program, which includes music .by Purcell; Bach, Mozart, and Brahms. Beattie, a new faculty mem ber from Syracuse University, is director of the Penn State Wo men’s Chorus, a group replacing Treble Singers. He teaches voice and Music 5. Edwin Garnbel of the Music department will accompany Beat tie and present a group of selec tions on the Virginal, ah antique musical instrument. Last season, Beattie was solo ist for the Buffalo Philharmonic and the' Rochester Oratoria So ciety. This season he will be singing the principal role in “Marriage of Figaro” with the New York City Center Opera Co. of Buffalo. independent Out Today An interview with John Lau faach, All-College president, is the feature article in the Independent newsletter which comes out to day. Richard Rau, editor, has an nounced. A . Game Facts Behind £gt£Ut I pe "se G /pT 3 rr- Expect 50,000 To Witness Topnotch Tilt By JAKE HIGHTON EAST' LANSING, Michigan Penn State's once-tied football team pits its modest five-game unbeaten streak here todsly against the longest collegiate win ning string owned by the brawny, swift-striking Michigan State Spartans. The Spartans have a 19-game win streak. Homecoming Day has swelled this college town so that nearly 50,000 are expected to bulge the walls of Macklin Stadium. The kickoff is scheduled for 2 p.m. EST. Beat Michigan, Oregon Slate Three national hookups—NßC, CBS, and Mutual—and State Col lege’s WMAJ will air one of the nation’s outstanding grid attrac tions of the weekend. The Spartans opened slowly with come-from-behind victories over Miqhigan,- 27-13, and Ore gon State, 17-14. Then the East Lansing Cyclone reached its peak of fury with crushing victories over Texas- A&M, 48-6. and Syra cuse, 48-7. . Penn State on' the other hand has “finished with a flourish”— as Coach Rip Engle’s wife terms it—on all five occasions this year. The Lions tripped Temple. 20-13; tied Big. Ten leader Purdue, 20-20: bumped William and Mary, 35-23; defeated West Virginia, 35-21; and last week stopped un beaten Nebraska, 10-0. Lion chances for an upset against the nation’s top-ranked team were hurt last week with the loss of Nittany end Joe Yu kica. In Yukica’s place the de (Continued on page seven) Poly Sci Club To Hold Panel “Question Hour. the 19 5 2 Election” will be the topic of a Political Science Club panel dis cussion at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 102 Willard. '■ The first part of the program will be patterned from “Meet the Press” with four political science majors questioning a panel of two Republicans and two Democrats. The audience will be permitted to ask questions during the sec ond part of ,the program. The meeting is open to the public. Guyla Woodward and Terence McNamee will represept the Re publicans while Melvin Rubin and Jules Lippert will answer ques tions for the Democrats. The ques tioners will be Donald Cutler, Jerome Gibson, Jerome Feinberg, and Marion Venzlawskas. WD Dating Code To Be Discussed West Dorm students will dis cuss the proposed West Dorm dating code at 6:15 p.m. Mon day in the main West Dorm lounge. The proposed code, which would permit unchaperoned dating in Hamilton, Irvin, and McKee Hall lounges, will be taken before the Senate com mittee on student affairs Tues day night by Dean of Me n Frank J. Simes. The code was brought up last semester, but no action was taken. If the code is approved at the meeting of West Dorm resi dents, West Dorm Council will discuss the issue at 7:15 p.m. in McKee lounge, Robert Hance, council president, said. FIVE CENTS
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