FRIDAY,.- MARCH ■6, 1953- ' College to Offer SulWiii<ej' ; -Tours ;: n - : 'Py GUS VOLLMER ' 1- r ■ i v Opportunities ; for study ;in the United. States or abroad;are t being, offered, to ’ studehts, teachers, and' other adults through . the' College. Extehsion. Services; the • Yale-Reid HalL Summer Session,; ‘and - the University ,of Oslo. ’• ••. '• r • The stu£y; : tour sponsored by the College Extension Service, is ;a European, seminar inducting trips through England, France, Austria, -Yugoslavia, Italy and Switzerland, to be held from June 28 to Aug. 24. The tour is designed to acquaint inembers withvthe. historical- back ground and landmarks,'.art trea sures, and contemporary' life of the peoples of ; Western Europe'. The tour cost is $lOBB.. ••; Oslo Studies Start June 27 Chi Omega ', Newly installed- officers of Chi Omega are : Gw.en: .Griffith,, presi dent; Shirley- -Musgfave,.v i c."e president;' Carolyn ■ Plezcar, secre tary; Jane Larpenteuf, treasurer.; Nancy' D. -White, ,'rushing chair man;. ■ Nancy - Meyers, personnel chairman; Gail Smith,'pledge mis tress;.'.'- ' - " Elinor Redferh, ..social chair man; Anna Mae Zimmerman, as sistant- social, chairmaii; Dorothy, Farrand, house ihdnager;' Beverly; O’Conner; assistant;‘house man-! ager; Beverly Dickinson, chapter correspondent; Neida Fralich, her ald; Joyce Johnson, alumni, secre tary; Beverly assistant treasurer; Margaret Crooks, tivities .chairman; Edith Burt, vocations chairman; Carol, Avery, assistant rushing . chairman; Jean Marohnic, intramural chairman; Barbara Rollo, song leader. Zeta Beta Tau ." New officers of Zeta Beta Tau are Don Brill, president; Seymour Goldstein, vice president; ELich ard'.Cheskis, secretary; Robert Cohan, treasurer; and Stanley Hirsch, historian. Alpha. Epsilon Phi prepared din ner and the Richard Marsh band held a jam session at the frater nity house Sunday. Pi Kappa Phi Pi Kappa Phi entertained'Kap pa Alpha. Theta at a spaghetti din ner at the fraternity house’. Entertainment included a skit performed by the pledges. Phi Mu Delta ' Phi Mu Delta recently elected Albert Bertani, president; Phillip Eckert,, vice president; Vernon Moyer, treasurer; and Edward Joeko, secretary. ' Alpha Omieron Pi... . Alpha Omieron Pi recently pledged Lu Weber, Sally Lessig, • Terry Dolson, Nancy Acheson, Rosemary,Short, Larr'etta Schlern mer,.,Joan Williams, 1 and Dolores Spathis. > Kappa Delta Rho Kappa Delta' Rho entertained; Delta Zeta ‘last night. The* pledges presented a. skit. The. evening was .completed with dancing .and re freshments. /.., ■; '. " Sigma Alpha Epsilon . - Sigma Alpha , Epsilon recently initiated Donald Calvert, Charles Conaway, James Culbertson, Rob ert Eisenhuth, MerlGerdes, Doug las Kelly, William Losa, James, Parniiter, and Richard Wille. Sigma Phi Alpha' : Sigma Phi Alpha held a rushing smoker at the chapter house Wed nesday. Refresh mi e nts were served.; •• Welsh Patron ; Sdiht To Be Honored Monday A.-program honoring St. David, the patron saint, of the Welsh, will be held Monday in the living cen ter of .the Home Economics Build-; ing. " • ;. .. • • Welsh food will be served from 7:30 .to ~8:30 p,m., and a' Welsh program will, follow. Contribu tions will be received;' and; the public isinvited to. attend. The program is sponsored by the Penn sylvania German culture‘commit tee of the. School ;of Home ’ Econ-. omics. J .'•• ' ■. , Newman Club Round and Square DANCE Friday, March 6 8 - 11 p.m. v • T.U.B. —Refreshments • Poblie lnvited ■ - THE' GOLDEGIAHi .STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Dr.- William H." Gray,: professor of. history and chairman of the all-College committee on interna tional understanding, will serve as group leader.; Applications, and further, information: can ■be ob.- 1 tanned -from; Dr. Gray. , University of Oslo,' Norway, will hold ■ its .: seventh .[summer, school-; for -. American ’ :,and. Cana dian students who have completed their 'freshman year in any acr credited, college, or. university, from June '27' to Aug. 8 at St. Olaf Col lege, Northfield, Minn. Competition is open. for a lim ited number of partial and full scholarships. A catalogue of courses, - preliminary application material and other \ information can be obtained, by writing to Oslo Summer School Admissions Office in care of St. Olaf College, Northfield,. Minn. French Lit, Language Studied Applications are now being rer ceived for the six-week Yale-Reid Hall Summer Session in Paris, France, July 6 -through Aug; 15. Those students recommended by. their college, or university who have two years of college French or its equivalent are qualified to apply. Courses are offered in the field of intermediate and - advanced. French, contemporary French-lit erature, art and international pol itics.. Tours will'. be conducted throughout France, and,the group will be given three • weeks: to travel before returning.. For further information and application blanks write to; Mr. Andersson, Hall of Graduate,rStu dies,; Yale University. " ' Booking in New York- • ... Two' round-trip sailings to Eu-' rope for . students and- 'teachers this summer have been announced by the Council on Student Travel, The. trips on the S. S. Arosa Klum will -start from Quebec for Lon-- don,.. LeHavre, and -Bremerhaven June 9 and July 4. Return sailings leave Bremefhaven Aug. 11 and Sept. 2. * ; “>■ Bookings are being madp ion other sailings from May through' September on which the council has reserved space: One way Tares are $l5O for space in dormitories and $l6O and.sl6s for cabins for two,’ three, and four persons. .Bookings can be. made through the Council on' Student .'Travel,' 179 Broadway, New York. . (JJA Campaign Starts Sunday • The- kickoff - meeting . for the 1953' United Jewish Appeal cam paign will be held .3' p.m. .Sunday at. the Hiller Foundation, .224 .S. Miles street. Solicitors ..for dormitories and town, are needed; according to Joseph Banks, co-chairman of the local drive.- Money : for ;the drive will also be raised at the Purim Carnival March 14. Faculty Luncheon Club - Herbert W. Beattie, assistant professor of music, .will-speak on “Music for Listening” at the Fac ulty.iLuhcheon club'meeting noon Monday at r the State College Hotel. - •' - - • HOME BAKED COOKIES and .coffee or . '.hof; chocolate gillie. ..... Served Daily \ 'til „ midnight %. ' DUTCH ' m PANT.RT,;,. 23® '.E», - AFSC Exhibit OnDisplay Ini/pbraty ; '.Photographs ana - pamphlets de scribing .'the summer, and year round:, service- projects of the Ameficahi. Friends . Service Coin mitteeare exhibited on the main floor of Pattee Library. The exhibit, arranged by Phyl lis Schrieder,.. eighth semester arts and' ''letters'- major,-' and Richard Slban. -seventh ..semester physics major, l is sponsored hy the Young Friends' of State College and the Penn- State Christian Associatipn. ' The - exhibit .is in . connection with, a visit'by Ray Hartsough,- college' secretary of- the AFSC,. Sunday through. Tuesday for . in terviews, Appointments for inter views with Hartsough are now being ,’inade by Maiy Jane! -Wy land. program-.coordinator of the PSCA. V ' '. . Hartsough will show slides ,on the. projects exhibited at•. an open meeting at 7 p.m. -Sunday ’at the Friends Meeting . "house, . 318 -S. Atherton street. WRA Discusses Plans - For Fencing Club -Plans .'for the reactivation of-a women’s. fencing club were dis cussed at' a meeting 'of the Wom en’s Recreation Association ex ecutive'board this week. Members of the. men’s fencing team would instruct the. women. - ' Louise Needham and Kathleen Queensbury. were named as fresh man representatives to the board. With Open Mind MARCH 23;. 1955—The Penn State -Daily Collegian ended 68 years of publication today with a final issue written by members of the' American Legion. Legionnaires stormed the Daily C’s offices clad in white robes and hoods, slayed two Daily C writers and in jured- four more. “J. Trueblood Loyalo, one of the Legionnaires, released the fol lowing statement to the press: "What we have • done today we have, done because it is the will of the people. It is unsafe Ip allow. criticism of the coun try. Besides, they criticized the. •American Legion!" MARCH 31, 19.55 William.S. McElvey, tent-pole raiser for the Wilson Brothers ; traveling show, was dismissed from his ■ job. today because .\he refused to. sign a loy alty path.- McElvey said: “I been raising' tent-poles for more than 20. yearS;':how I’m going, to raise a little dickens ” ■ APRIL 9, 1955—Members of the .Wilspn Brothers ..traveling show deriismd an opehdiearipig for Me-. Elvey, and' also request that' a committee made up of carnival workers -‘and. customers review McElVey’s loyalty.. Both requests were turned down- by. the car-, nival’s > new owner—J. Trueblood Loyalo. > , "Reds;.ain't got no rights;"- Loyalo said, having- an Ameri can; flag.-.-■. ' - . (It. may be pointed out at this point that the ‘ Wilson Brothers traveling -show -is the : only one known to., have American flags and Legion pennants .waving from its . tents instead of 'ordinary cir cus banners.) : .APRIL 14,'1955—Great strike of carnival : workers begins throughput. U;S. - Workers refuse, to feed elephants, .tent-pole raisers refuse to raise tent-poles,, trapeze artists; refuse to . swing. Things are in oneheck of a mess. - InChicago a liiile girl com plained to her-mother about Special Columbia 3-speed record attachment plus a $3.00 ; LP record or records of your Religion Two Square Planned for Two local religious groups have, planned square dances for to night. The Newman Club wild hold a round and square dance from Bto 11 tonight .in the Temporary Union Building. The dance is open to the public, and refreshments will'be served. Nominees for new officers of the Newman Club will attend the dance. Nominees for president are Edward Kittka and Dennis Dono- van; for vice-president, Thomas Ahearn; for secretary, Joan Are hart and Catherine Carr; for treas urer, Antonette Grast and Patricia Nageotte. Elections will be held March 15. ' ' ' { Wesley Foundation will hold a “Circle and Square Jamboree” at 7:30 tonight in the foundation recreation hall. The- Rev. Robert Cressy from Swarthmore-will speak on “Wis dom of • God versus Wisdom of Man” to Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship at 7:30 tonight in 405 Old Main. - The Rev. Arthur L. Ruths will Show and comment on colored slides on church symbols from 7 to 8 tonight to the Lutheran Stu dents Association. Planned games in the fellowship hall of the Luth eran, Student House will follow the talk. . At Hillel Foundation at 8 to night, Rabbi Benjamin M. Kahn wil lspeak on “Too Little and Too Late” at the: Sabbath Eve Ser vices. (Continued from page four) the strike. "I wanna see the circus, mommy." "Dirty Red," her mother an swered, slapping her down. APRIL 15, 1955—J. Trueblood Loyalo announces the dismissal of Trudy; the trained seal, from his show. Says Loyalo: "Trudy refused to. play America on her horns—obvious ly, she is un-American. No'one —-seal ■or not—shall be in my show unless they are loyal." • APRIL. 20, .1955—Great Strike ends. Senator . McCarthy .and J. Trueblood Loyalo, in their intense interest in exposing circuses have become thrilled with them: and have joined the Wilson show as a combined act. Without them, .the loyalty legislation lacks teeth and the J strike ends. McCarthy has, resigned his' Senate post and has become a fire-eater in the show. Says he: . "I have no trouble until I think about the fire being red;" V J., Trueblood Loyalo has be come a shake charmer. He goes into a' huge pit of snakes and ca resses and holds-the snakes fear lessly. “There is only one trouble;” says ..Wilson, (again owner ,of the show). "We can’t tell the snakes from Loyalo.” L U F S E O N G . Players' Musical Schwab ; March 12, 13, 14 Dances Tonight WSSF Officer Speaks to PSCA Money that foreign students re ceive through World Student Service Fund is appreciated as much as money received through the Federal government, accord ing to David Levering, New York and Middle Atlantic secretary of WSSF. Levering spoke to several cam pus groups including the Penn State .Christian Association Wed nesday night according to Joseph Haines, acting chairman of the Campus Chest. Levering praised Campus Chest, which raises mon ey for WSSF and other charity and service organizations. Haines said that about 35 col leges in this region will attend a WSSF convention in Philadel phia during the first week in May to share ideas on fund raising methods. Barons Will Hold Exchange Events Tentative plans for several ex change social events between in dependent men and women were discussed Tuesday night by mem bers of Barons, Nittany-Pollock social organization, meeting with 13 independent women represent ing. Leonides, independent wom e’s organization; Philotes, inde pendent women’s social organiza tion, and-the floor counselor groups from women’s dormitor ies. Although no specific program has ■ been set up, a succession of planned activities probably will begin in two weeks. Eleven Barons, Squires, coun selors, and advisors from the Nit tany-Pollock area attended. Barons is “rapidly reorganiz ing,” Alan Reeves, president pro tempore, said. 6 Schools to Meet At PSCA Cabin Students from five colleges and the Penn State Christian Associ ation will hold a weekend confer ence of the Central Pennsylvania unit, of . the. Student Christian Movement .toihorrow and Sunday at Watt’s cabin on Tussey Moun tain. The visiting colleges will in clude Lycoming College, Lock Haven State Teachers College, Juniata College, Mansfield State Teachers College, and Bucknell University: Cfct/Hame* MARILYN MONROE "NIAGARA" ROBERT TAYLOR .. ELIZABETH TAYLOR "IYANHOE" KATHRYN GRAYSON HOWARD KEEL "LOVELY TO LOOKAT" PAGE FTV^S
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers