The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 18, 1953, Image 2
PAGE TWO Coeds Surpass Men Campus women as a group contributed a greater amount of money to the student Campus Chest drive than any other group, according to Joseph Haines, acting chairman. Haines said campus women, including independent and sorority women, gave $2373. Campus men ran second with $1789.44 contrib uted. 37 Students Attain Ml Dean's List The School of Mineral Indus tries has cited 37 students for out standing scholarship during the fall semester, Dean Edward Stei dle has announced. Three students with perfect 3.0 averages were listed. They were George Austin and Richard Hall green, both seniors, and Thomas Prokopowicz, a junior. Seniors are Austin and Hall green, 3.0; Edward Sugrue, 2.88; Robert Hunter, 2.85; Charles Smeltzer, Jr., 2.84; Harry Shadle, 2.82; Harry Surkalo, 2.77; Joseph Hutta, 2.76; Peter Mandel, Jr., 2.75; John Russ, 2.75; Robert M. Williams, 2.71; Norman Bowne, 2.66; Hedvika Lucas, 2.64; and Richard R. Young, 2.57. . Juniors: Prokopowicz, 3.0; Lawrence James, 2.95; Thomas Albert, 2.88; Daniel Jacobs, 2,78; David Girard, 2.75; William Col lins, 2.7; Charles Smeal, 2.7; Charles Kreischer, 2.68; Paul Dif fenbach, 2.68; Althea May Rector, 2.65; Lowell Krawitz, 2.6; James Brannigan, Jr., 2.54; Herbert Wel der, Jr., 2.5; and William Winter bottom, 2.5, Sophomores: Edmund Reiss, Alexander Simkovich, 2.71; Jack Conner, 2.69; Norman Wein garten, 2.57; Waino Arvo, 2.51; and Gerald Heydt, 2.5. Freshmen: Bruce Lieske, 2.75; Robert Heifer, 2.64; and Thomas Falkie, 2.62. Hudson to Talk To Grad Group “The Essentials of Graduate Education,” will be the topic of N. Paul Hudson, dean of the Grad uate School at Ohio State Uni versity and speaker at the Grad uate School convocation at 7:30 tonight in Schwab Auditorium. D. Woods Thomas, graduate student in agricultural economics and president of the Graduate Student Association, will preside at the convocation. < , ,The Rev. Luther H. Harshbar ger. College chaplain, will deliver the invocation, and George ( Cei ga, organist, will play organ music before and after the convocation. Phys Ed Dean's List Announced _ The School o’f Physical Educa tion and Athletics has - released the dean’s list for the fall sem ester. Seniors are . Madaline Caveny, 2.5; Nyle Hersberger, 2.5; Robert Kenyon, 2.7; Katherine. Nicoll, 2.72; Dorothy Rose, 2.63; and Sarah Whitney, 2.73. Juniors: Alice Colbert, 2.82; Jo anna Fink, 2.55; Juanita Hudson, 2.66; and Margaret Powell, 2.84. Sophomores: John Chillrud, 2.55; Elizabeth George, 2.52; Jo anna Graves, 2.93; Lois Hummel, 2.57; Shirley Painter, 2.81; and Martha Rojahn, 2.62. Pre-Vet Club Meeting Dr. S. F. Scheidy, director of veterinary medicine for the Sharp and Dohme pharmaceutical firm in West Point, Pa., will address the Pre-Vet Club at 7:30 tonight in 105 Agriculture. No Coffee Hour Today There will be no Dean of Men’s coffee hour today. The former weekly social event is to be held every two weeks this semester, Frank J. Simes, Dean of Men, has announced. in Drive Other classifications and their amounts are fraternities, $1304.82; town students, including men and women, $758.63; miscellaneous, $250.84; and commuters, $61.50. Haines said the miscellaneous in cluded _ contributions that were turned in and could not be clas sified. Previous figures released by Chest officials included funds of the March of Dimes and the work ing fund with student contribu • tions. March of Dimes funds were : returned to the Campus Chest last year because the national charter for the National Founda tion for Infantile Paralysis does not permit the acceptance of funds gained through a mass drive. The working fund, of $435.57 and the March of Dimes fund of $959.23, added to the student to tal of $6538.23, brings the total to $7933.03. However, this is $3 short of the previously announced student total of $7936.03. Chest of ficials do not know why the $3 difference exists. Haines said he will check into the difference. Other figures, Kickoff Dance and faculty-administration totals, remain the same. The Sept. 19 Kickoff Dance brought in $1300.34 and the faculty-administration drive totaled $1812.61. The total collected for the Cam pus Chest is now either $11,048.98 or $11,045.98, depending upon the missing $3. The goal for the drive was $12,000. Concerning the final report of the Campus Chest committee be fore All-College Cabinet, Haines said these figures will not be def inite until the bursar collects money pledged by the students. The pledges will be collected Thursday and Friday when fees are due, Players Workshops Players workshops scheduled for 7 tonight are stage props in the basement of Schwab and sound in the Little Theater. Froth Ad Staff to Meet Froth shingles and new accounts will be distributed at a Froth ad vertising staff meeting at 7:3o"to night im the Froth office. Borough's Part in Radio Series to End March 1 State College’s participation in “The People Act,” a pioneering radio series in adult education and community developments spon sored by the Ford Foundation, will end when the program’s educa tional center in State College closes March 1. The announcement was made by Ray H. Smith, educational di rector of the project, at a dinner ini the Nittany Lion Inn for staff members and guests, including President Milton S. Eisenhower, national chairman of the project, and Elmore McKee, founder. President Eisenhower com mented on the achievements of the 26-week radio series, while Mc- Kee expressed his conviction that the radio series had impressed on American: communities the need for more united action in solving local problems, During the series of broadcasts, which -originated in New York, a group of communities was pre sented whose citizens had worked together to solve local problems. Listeners whose towns had simi lar problems were invited to write for help to the educational center located in State College. Advice and names of other in- ANNOUNCING... New Menus to Include Lenten Requests Are Available for Your Service at The Corner TEDS DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Gardecki President Of Pollock Joseph Gardecki was elected president of Pollock Council at a council meeting last night. Other officers elected were: vice-presi dent, John Quigley; secretary, Thomas O’Brien; and treasurer, Lewis Maust. Donald Ludwig was. elected representative-at-large" to the As sociation. of Independent Men board of governors. Gardecki ap pointed Robert Clancy food rep resentative for the council on the All-College dining 'hall commit tee and Howard Zeutzius chair man of the public welfare com mittee. Unless proper support is given the Barons, Nittany-Pollock social organization, Gardecki. who is al so acting president of the Barons, said he would ask the Nittany and Pollock Councils to dissolve the organization. A proposed amendment to the AIM constitution which would limit presidency in that organiza tion to juniors was brought up by Donald Douglass, past president of Pollock Council. He said those in favor of the amendment claim that restricting the office to a junior would raise the prestige of the office, which they contend is now considered merely as a “step ping stone” to some higher cam pus position. Those against the proposed amendment say that by such a restriction some better men may be denied the right to run for presidency, Douglass said. Ist Art Lecture Set for Today A lecture-reading on Eugene Delacroix, a leading French ro manticist of the mid-19th century, will be presented at 4:15 p.m. to day in the Mineral Industries Art Gallery. This will be the first in a series of four lecture-readings on paint ers who have done important writ ing as well as paintings. Francis E. Hyslop, Jr., associate professor of fine arts, will read from “The Journal of Eugene Delacroix. The presentations arranged by the division of fine and applied arts, will be held each Wednesday for four weeks. Other painters to be included in the series will be Paul Gaugin, Vincent Van Gogh, and John Marin. ' dividuals and organizations to whom communities could turn to for advice were given. The project is scheduled to con tinue with more than. 180 radio stations asking for transcriptions, Smith reported. Spanish Club Speaker Dr. John D. Lawther will speak on sports in Latin America at the Spanish Club meeting at 7 to night in Atherton Hall lounge. Vets Club to Meet The Penn State Veterans Club will meet at 7:30 tonight'in 119 Os mond to enroll new members and elect officers. Frustrated in Love? There's Hope for You By HELEN LUYBEN Don’t let “love frustration” set in like gangrene because he, oi she, didn’t send you a valentine Saturday. The thing to do, warn the authorities on the science of love, is to forget it immediately. Whether or not the general public is aware of it, there exists today a group of psychiatrists, psychologists and sociologists who have been able to approach love|~ scientifically —an admirable ac complishment. It is this group that insists love frustration not only lowers bodily resistance and causes profound organic disturbances, but lessens a person’s chances of reaching a hale and hearty middle age. Life insurance tables, they say, show that mortality rates for men with unhappy love lives are two to four times greater than for men happily in love. What would they have you do to forget a disappointment in love? Simple—just (I)'fight down the impulse to isolate yourself and brood, (2) take a brief vaca tion, (3) keep busy, and (4) don’t worry about finding a new lovej interest because one will find you. The love scientists are extreme- j ly optimistic about this whole business of falling in and out of love. They insist that finding your | dream mate isn’t the least bit like j looking for a needle in a haystack. There is not one special person in the world for you, but one special type. And this dream type is com posed of countless thousands of faces, any one of which you may latch onto. There is however, an actual dream type for each individual, and the authorities warn: Hold out for the woman-or man-type of your dreams and don’t settle fof less. And never give up hope that love will come to you. If you are a woman between the ages of 16 and 20, or a man in your early twenties, or of either sex in your early forties, your susceptibility to love is at its peak, according to the love scientists. They further point out that love is not an uncommon phenomenon. Prepare for an Executive Career in RETAILING - in just One Year! From New York to New Zealand, college graduates converge on "The Retailing Center" to train for an exciting, rewarding career—in just one year! Retailers need you—and look to our graduate school—for future advertising managers, buyers, merchandise managers, fashion executives, store managers, personnel administrators, researchers. Prominent retailers send their sons and daughters to the N.Y.U. School of Retail ing to • help carry on the ' family business successfully. Our one-year Master's Degree program includes courses in all branches of retail-store management, under well-known spe cialists, plus 10 full weeks of supervised'executive training, with pay, in leading New York stores, plus valuable store and market contacts. For details, write for BULLETIN CJ NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RETAILING 100 Washington Square East v New York 3, New York WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1?, 1g53 One poll showed that the average college student has two and a quarter love affairs. No one can get along without love. The desire to love and be loved is born in each individual and must be satis fied in one way or another. Love is one of two basic things that every individual strives for— the second is a feeling of security. This feeling, say the psycholo gists, is impossible to attain with out first realizing love. . The scientists are both kind and unkind to women in their analysis of love, in that they (1) recognize no superiority of the male sex over the female, but (2) reveal woman’s age-old secret—that a (Continued on page' eight) Election Code To Be Planned All-College elections committee will meet at 7:15 tonight in 201 Old Main, according to Ronald Thorpe, chairman. Thorpe said the committee will draw up the election code for the spring elections. All-College of fices, junior and senior class of fices,'and Athletic Association of fices are filled for the following year at the spring elections. • Offices which will be open for election are All-College president* -vice president, and secretary treasurer: senior class president, vice president, and" secretary treasurer; junior class president, vice president, and secretary treasurer; . and Athletic Associa tion president and secretary-treas urer.