PAGE TWO Greek 'Creatures' Cavort Tonight Halloween was over a few weeks ago, but partygoers will see hoboes, devils, cavemen, Indians, and many other weird creatures when they attend fraternity houseparties tonight. A modern art museum will be duplicated at Acacia's "Come as Your Wildest Dream" party. Joe Knepper will play for the costumed affair which is open. Guests at the "Crimson Pira climb the gangplank to dance to the music of Jimmy Spaniel and his orchestra. The ship's decks will be open for visitors at 10 p.m. Balloons will set off the decor ations at the Alpha Chi Sigma "Supressed Desire" affair where Johnny Nicolosi's High Hatters will provide music for the open party. "Showboat" will be in town at the semi-formal pledge dance at Alpha Epsilon Pi. Entrance to the party will be by means of a gang plank, and the door will be trans formed into a porthole to complete the motif. • Indians will sharpen up their tomahawks for {ht "Mohawk Mas sacre" at Alpha Gamma Rho. Mu sic for the occasion will be fur nished by Don Smith and his or chestra. A typical grave yard atmos phere will be found at the "Spooks on Parade" party at Alpha Phi Delta. The music will be provided by records, and guests will be served pizza by pledges. Comfortable orange crates will replace the furniture at the "Pov erty Party" at Alpha Sigma Phi. Spider webs will complete the hobo atmosphere, and music will be provided by Sonny West and his orchestra. "New Year's Eve" will be cele brated early this year at Alpha Tau Omega, where a ballroom will set the stage. High silk silhouettes and a large ball of confetti in the center of the ballroom will create atmosphere. The Dream Time Serenaders will play for the semi-formal "Autumn Flame" dance at Alpha Zeta. Decorations of fall leaves and flowers will set the stage for the dance in honor of the new brothers. Entrance to Beta Theta Pi's "Haunted House" will be through a tunnel. A fun house complete with torture chamber will carry out the theme. Jack Jenkins and his orchestra will play for the affair which is closed till 10 p.m. Talent from the Villa in Tyrone will be found at Seta Sigma Rho where Vince Termefonte and his orchestra will furnish music. Small tables with candles will surround the dance floor, and the luminous ceiling of starlight will complete the French cabaret at mosphere. Oriental costumes and the aro ma of incense will turn Chi Phi Five New Dairy Barns Will Be Occupied Soon Five new dairy barns to be occupied soon will replace the old barns which have been in use for 35 years. The barns, one for each breed of dairy cow, were designed by Max L. Dawdy, instructor in dairy husbandry, assisted by John Miller, chief draftsman of the physical plant. The new barns are reported to be the most modern, complete, and useful in this country. They will also be the headquarters for Philip D. Jones, superintendent in charge of the College's dairy herds. Although the barns are pri marily shelters for the cows, they will also be the basis of research projects expected to answer fun damental problems in barn design and management. Barns Have Fans Features included in the barns are the types of stalls, ventilating systems, feed storage, handling facilities, milking methods, and cleaning procedures. A huge fan on a side wall at one end of a barn will keep the atmosphere dry in the barn dur ing the winter. Other barns have similar features but are different in design. Another barn is designed to permit the animals to roam in open pens and feed from a self feeder. In the new setup the cow goes to the milker, rather than the milker going to the cow. Each Barn Different "Haymakers," another new. fea ture, are huge circular structures which look like silos. They will be filled with hay through which air will be blown to practically dry the hay. One barn substitutes By BETTY ALLEN to Party" at. Alpha Chi Rho will into a realistic "Chinese Opium Den." Jack Lister will be on hand to provide music for the guest's. Ali Baba and his fifty thieves will be found inside their cave at Delta Chi. Large urns of all sizes and shapes will complete the Arabian nights fantasy. Party hoppers can flop down and relax at Delta Tau Delta's "Flop House Fling." A reproduc tion of an old hotel will be the home of the "bums" who will dance to music by the Jack Hu ber combo. . Foreclosure signs will be found outside the "Poverty House" of Delta Theta Sigma where hoboes will spend the night before the house is condemned at 1 a.m. A Parisian atmosphere will pre vail at Delta Upsilon's "French Waterfront Cafe." French waiters will serve at the closed party. Cavemen will prowl at Kappa Delta Rho, where pets will be din asours instead of the usual type. Entrance to the party will be through a cave erected outside the house. Nittany mountaineers will feel at home at Lambda Chi Alpha's "Mountaineer's Ball." The four Sharps will play. Illustrations depicting c i r cu s life will set the stage for the guests of \Phi Gamma Delta, who will portray various members of the circus family. The Melody Men will play for the "Fiji Island Brothers' Circus." • A Paris art studio will give the Phi Kappa "Beaux Arts Ball" a realistic setting. Music will be furnished by Jim Erb's orchestra. The "Roaring Twenties" at Phi Kappa Psi will bring mom and dad's old clothes from many an attic to complete the scene. The devil himself will be on hand to greet the sinners as they enter a reproduction of the gates of Hell at Phi Kappa Sigma. A large devil's head will provide entrance to the "Hell's Fires" par ty, with music by the Five Pfiles. A replica of a deserted island, complete with palm trees, will be found on the dance floor at Phi Kappa Tau. Guests will portray their "Suppressed Desire" in keep ing with the theme. Music will be provided by Richard Dennis. The Marsh Donley trio will play for an informal dance at Phi Sig-; ma Kappa. A large tent will provide en trance to Pi Kappa Alpha's "Be- hay storage space in the second floor loft for the haymaker. In order to determine what fea tures are the most desirable, no two barns are exactly the same. Hand labor has been replaced by machinery in many instances, but not at the sacrifice of the prac tical methods of farmers. A special attempt has been made to set up this farmstead in such a manner that Pennsylvania dairy men will be able to judge and apply the various features to their own farms. Visitors may see the operations at the new barns. Social Research Center Receives Aid Grants The Social Science Research Center has been awarded a grant in-aid from the Permanent Sci ence Fund, according to Dr. Sam uel W. Blizzard, administrative director of the center. The grant will be used to inves tigate the economic and social sig nificance of the new steel plants being constructed at Morrisville. The project will be directed by Dr. Nathan Belfer, assistant pro fessor of economics. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA douins Ball" where guests will be dressed in Arabic costumes. The devil will make eyes at guests who enter through his mouth at Pi Kappa Phi where the "Devil's Cavern" will be high lighted by the reproduction of stalactites and stalagmites silhou etted by a black backdrop. Large duplications of records will carry out the theme of Sigma Alpha Epsilon's "Juke Box Jam boree." Guests will wear costumes to carry out the theme. A bass fiddle will be found out side Sigma Alpha Mu and cos tumes portraying favorite records will help set the stage for the party. Sheet music and large black silhouettes of records will finish the setting. Silhouettes of pledges will set the stage for the formal pledge dinner-dance at Sigma Nu. A large metallic ball will be placed in the center of the dance floor. The party will be open• after 9 p.m. Girls will keep the phones busy at Sigma Chi when they call their dates for the "Turn-a-bout" par ty. Rules and regulations will be distributed to each girl when her date arrives. A pledge dance will take on a new twist at Sigma Phi Alpha where "Parisian Masquerade" will be held. The Arch of Triumph will be erected over the door through which guests will enter on their way to the Paris cafe. Reproductions of gas tanks will be in keeping with the "Gas Sta tion" at Sigma Phi Epsilon's par ty. Able attendants will refuel empty tanks anytime after 10 p.m., when the party will be open. The Two Duces will provide music for the occasion. Sigma Phi Sigma will hold a "Debutantes Ball" for which John Joiner and his orchestra will pro vide the music. Guests will enter the ball under a canopy erected over the front door. A large reproduction of a pledge pin and musical notes depicting the theme "Rhapsody in Blue" will set the theme for the formal pledge dance at Sigma Pi. It will be open to the public at 11:30 p.m. The gangplank will be lowered for guests to climb aboard Tau Kappa Epsilon's "S ho wbo a t" where Spanish moss and a mural will complete the the Me. Guests will see a view of the New York skyline at Tau Phi Delta's "Penthouse Party." Senior Award Forms Ready Seniors may secure applica tion forms for the three-year Root- Tilden Scholarship for the 1953-54 term by applying through the De partment of Political Science, 119 Sparks. A candidate must be an un married male citizen between the ages of 20 and 28. Additional in formation about the scholarship may be obtained in 119 Sparks. The scholarship program, de signed to help train and develop potential leaders in public affairs, was inaugurated at New York University two years ago. Forty two men now are enrolled under training. The scholarships are awarded on the basis of superior academic record (meriting Phi Beta Kappa or its equivalent), potential capa city for • unselfish public leader ship, and active extracurricular participation in college life. BEAT RUTGERS! The TAV E R N ITAL J IAN SPAGHETTI, with Meat Sauce SALISBURY STEAK MIXED SEAFOOD PLATE BAKED HAM PRIME SIRLOIN STEAKS "Theta Chi Players" will per form for the "Bowery Brawl" at Theta Chi. A life-sized man typi fying bowery days will be leaning on a lamp post outside the house. Happy people will feel at home at the Tau Kappa Phi "Mardi Gras" where costumes will com plete the setting of the stag e. Ralph Carle will provide music for the affair. \ Theta Xi will hold a semi-for mal pledge dance with music by Joey Frank and his orchestra. In keeping with the theme "Go Roman with the Zeta Beta Taus," the ZBTs will have colu rn n s throughout the house: Costumes typical of Roman times will be worn. Bickdrops of Arabian Night scenes will lend a realistic atmos phere for the "Sheet Shindig" at Triangle. A "Paris Cafe" will be found at Phi Epsilon Pi, where costumes will complete the theme of the party. A blue and gray color 'scheme will create a "Paris Water Front Cafe" at Kappa Alpha Psi. Four fraternities, Beaver }louse, Delta Sigma Phi, Phi Delta Theta, and Omega Psi Phi, will hold open houses instead of costumed parties. Two Speech Profs To Present Papers Dr. Eugene T. McDonald, direc tor of the speech and hearing clinic, and Dr. Robert S. Bru baker, assistant prof ess or of speech, will present papers at the 28th convention of the American Speech and Hearing Association, to be held Thursday through Sat urday in Detroit, Mich. Other members of the Depart ment of Speech who will attend the convention are Dr. Bruce M. Siegenthaler, Margaret C. Raabe, Dr. James V. Frick, and Roland J. WnHattum. Dr. Asa. J. Berlin and William Horean, of the Depart ment of Education, will also at tend. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1952 Profs to Air Foreign Tunes Over WMAJ Memo to the ';Old Prof of Groovology 54," WMAJ's late thour disc jockey: There's an ad dition to the curriculum. Some professorS from the Romance Lan guage department of the School of Liberal Arts will soon be in the act, spinning and comment ing on tunes which they believe are too gbod to go unheard. Private record' collections sup ply- the melodies for "The Music of the Nations," a program fea turing tunes seldom heard on the air. For instance, the Gaelic songs played on the program are as foreign from Broadway-created Irish songs as "Too Old to Cut the Mustard" is from Mozart. The program specializes in the relatively unknown music of one land with comments from the guest narrator-collector. "Generally speaking," said Irv ing Rothberg of the Romance Language department, the pro gram's director, "if you've heard it on our program, you've heard it for the first time." Nicholas Brentin; assistant pro fessor of Romance languages, will inaugurate the weekly series 8:30 p.m. Monday over WMAJ with a program of Rossini's "Slabat Ma ter," one of the composer's lesser known religious ,pieces. Future programs will feature Japanese, Belgian, Italian, and Portugese music. This will be the program's third year on the air. Hillel Concert Canceled The informal record concert which was scheduled tomorrow at the Hillel Foundation has been canceled. INVITATIONS COMMERCIAL PRINTING Pugh & Beaver State College _ lj , ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers