APRIL 10, -1954 ps4A:,.:,:flo::oion:o4 E'64';'..,_Tamo--io;i'i ~ . . , , •, , ;kirk: Garber, fifth semester chemical engineering major, and .. Patricia Jones, sixth semester arts and - letters major, are vying for the office.. of , _president of the.penn State Christian Association in the' annual: elections being held today and tomorrow in the PSCA office, .3.04. Old Main.. Only PSCA members are eligible `to 'Vote. foi '. other , executive offices are 'LaVerne Applegate and William Williams, vice pres ident; Shirley.Pritchard. and Elea nor; Kelly, 'secretary; Douglas Finnerhoie and Paul Aucker, treasurer. • , - Nominees "for cabinet-at-large arezJeannette.Nitrauer, Alexander Zerban, Jqan Packard, Pearl Bea ver, Phyllis Richards, Robert Hare, Nancy Schade, Patricia lobs t, Mary Glading, Glenn Elder; and Robert. Hayes. Five persons will be elected to the cabinet. Elections for members of the hoard of direCtors are also being held. Nominees for student repre senta.tives, to be elected for one Year, are Jane Ifft, Eliza Newell, William Wright, Margaret Sny der, Helen Lineaweaver, and Mary Anne Albert. ' , Alumni Nominees Five faculty members will be Chosen for a• three-year term. Nominees are Dr. Russell B. Dick erson, vice-dean of the School of Agriculture; Dr. Harold K. Schilling, dean of the Graduate School; Dr. Seth W. Russell, pro fessor of sociology; Ralph E. Arm ington, assistant professor of elec trical engineering; Dr. Samuel W. Blizzard, associate professor of sociology; Robert Murray, assist ant:professor of history; Edward C. Henry, professor of ceramics; Maurice S. Gjesdhal, professor of mechanical engineering; Dr. Dor othy Houghton, assistant dean of the . School of Horne Economies; and Fred Coombs, professor of physical education. Nominees for alumni represen tatives, to be elected for a three -year 'term, are Charles T. Douds, regional director of the National Labor, Relations Board, and J. K. Stern, president of the American Institute of Cooperation. Clergy To Be Elected • Candidates for lay church rep resentatives, to be elected for one year,. are Mrs. Maude Saby, Pr. Charles M. Long, Mrs. D. C. - Jones, -John R. Truby, Dr. Kitty Fisher, Mildred Ailmen, William L. Kiel gaard, and 'Robert Meahl. Four will be- elected. Four clergy representatives will be elected for one year. Norninees are the Rev. Jones B. Shannon, the Rev. Robert H. Eads, /the Rev. Frank Montgomery, the Rev. Al bert S. Asendorf, the Rev. John Duley, the Rev. Arthur L. Ruths, the Rev. Melvin Whitmire,' and the Rev. Andrew E. Newconier. Board,members will. vote by ballots hich have been mailed to them. Elections will close at noon tomorrow and all ballots must be the PSCA office by then. Home Ec Demonstration Connie Kelly, General, Electrig Company, will give a range ana freezer demonstration at 10 a.m. today in 106 Home Economics. Home economics students arid' staff are ,invited to attend: •-•-- ' Alum' ReceAyes Award Dr. Harold ,H.• Williams, grad uate.' of the College in 1929,- was presented a. Borden Award at the annual Meeting of the Ameripan Institute -of ,Nutrition Wednesday in Chicago,- 111. • ' . THE DAILY - COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA ri Political Scene (Continued from page four) duplication of three planks, more thanlialf of those presented. Both parties - came out for the student press, a housing survey, and ex pansion of hospital facilities. This did not imply cooperation be tween the( parties, but only the logical results of working on the same issues. The two identical planks this year are on issues which both party chairmen consider subor dinate to some of the other planks. Yet the very fact of their duplication poEnts out their im portance. • The two co-planks urge the es tablishment of an All-College Su preme Court and the establish ment of a convention system for parties on campus. Neither idea is extremely original, but both are new to Penn State. The idea of a higher court for studentS to ap peal to brought the College's judi cial system into party planks for the second time in two years— in 1951 a Lion Party plank asked more consideration of women be fore Judicial. There are other col leges with a supreme court. The idea of political conventions was worked up mostly on the State Party side.- Both clique chairmen Mike Enelow and head of the advisers Tom Farrell have made detailed plans for a conven tion system—they have planned a trip to Ohio- State where the sys tem is in .use today. The system could bring more color to local politics, certainly, with Rec Hall filled with plac ard-bearing delegates from var ious living areas, banner of red, white and blue draped over the - balconies. It would. be an ex cellent, way to put the College's new educational TV channel to work. , It is interesting to note the planks the party clique chairmen consider, the most important. State Party leaves little doubt as to its main plank, which is summarized at the top of the party's leaflets— "To increase employment oppor tunity for the Penn State student while in school and after gradu ation . ." The object is to have a job (summer and permanent) for every student before he leaves the College in the spring. Lion Party - clique ch.airman Rick Kirschner said yesterday the most . - w - ~. .. oa is, ... ..... o"'• Red Ras p berry Crew err I .. . . . , v Vanifl Iceay .ce am and ,Li me cL ..merbet -Magazine Editor - -r Edith Ramsey Will Address H Ec Visitors Edith Ramsay, home equipment editor. of the American Home magazine, will deliver a speech entitled "Don't Be a Drip" at 7:30 p.m. April 17 as a part of the Home Economics Spring Week end program. Another speaker for the week end program will be A. G. Ash croft, vice president for research and development •of Alexander Smith, Inc. The program will be centered around textiles and will bring to the campus profestional men and women in the field of textiles as, well as homemakers, high school students, and alumni •of the School of Home Economics. Miss Ramsay- will explain ways to launder fabrics made from the new miracle fibers.. As a home equipment editor for the past sev en years, Miss Ramsay is well acquainted with the latest de velopments in household equip ment and gadgets. She has also had experience as an apartment house manager and a buyer of home equipment for a Newark department store. Ashcroft will speak on "Tex tiles in a Changing World" and will - emphasize the importance of textiles, textile products, and syn thetic fibers today. In two speech es, he will discuss some present day problems of the t extile industry and- their solutions. important plank in his party's list is the first plank, which urges the establishment of a student dis count -card system. The plan, which Kirschner says has the backing of some merchants, would allow students to get reductions on goods from merchants who are part of the plan. Edith Ramsey W ICE CRElizer AND SHEREZT ..s - Available at your Breyer Dealer's in cones, freshly-dipped pints, quarts and economical half-gallons. Wesley Foundation To \ Host Conference Wesley Foundation will play host this weekend to students from 20 Pennsylvania colleges who are attending the Methodist Student Movement Conference in the borough. The conference theme, "God's Word—Man's Hope," will veloped in a series of three lectures by the guest speaker, Dr. Hazzard, professor of the Old Testament at Westminster Theo loglcal Seminary. The first address, "The Human Predicament," will begin at 8 to night in St. Paul's Methodist Church, 256 E. College avenue. "God's Word," the second lecture theme," will be presented at 9:15 a.m. tomorow. The last, "Man's Hope," will be given at 1:45 p.m. tomorrow, Dr. Hazzard will also give a summary of• the lectures at 9:30 a.m. Sunday as well as preach the sermon at the 10:45 a.m. service. Colleges which will be repre sented at the conference are Dick inson, Gro v e City, Edinboro State Teachers, Clarion State Teachers, 810 omsbur g State Teachers, West Chester State Teachers, Indiana State Teachers, and East Stroudsburg State Teach ers. The University of Pittsburgh, University of Pennsylvania, West minster, Bucknell University, Ce dar Crest, Lehigh University, Mor avian, Carnegie Institute of Tech nology, Lycoming, All e gheny, Wilkes, and the College. MarriageJ Brantz-Nadler Mr.' and Mrs. David Nadler of Philadelphia ' announce the mar riage of their daughter, Joan, to Lt. George Brantz of the U.S. Army. The wedding took place March 29 in the Keneth-Israel Synagogue, Philadelphia. Dr. Ber tram Korn officiated. Mrs. Brantz is a fifth semester sociology major. Lt. Brantz is a graduate of the Woodrow Wilson Institute of Pub lic and International Affairs at Princeton University, where he was a member of the Court Club. Inter-Varsity Club To Hear Pastor The Reverend' E. C. Crimmings of the Central Baptist Church, Minyale, N.J., wilt address Inter- Varsity Club at 7:30 tonight in 405 Old Main. "Battle of Warsaw Ghetto" will be the topic of an address by Rabbi Benjamin M. Kahn, director of the Hillel Foundation, at the Sabbath Eve Services, 8 tonight at Hillel. Today is the tenth anni versary of the Battle of Warsaw Ghetto. Hosts for this service will be members of Zeta Beta Tau. A square dance will be held by Lutheran Student Association at 7:30 tonight. (F&C)6fact, l l Modern Dance Demonstration At 8 Tonight Described by New York critics as master of the modern dance, Charles Weidman, dance impres sionist and mime, will present a lecture-demonstration at 8 tonight in 121 Sparks. Topic for his de monstration wi 1 1 be "Dramatic Movement and Pantomime in Re lation to the Theater." Weidman will conduct a master class in modern dance for students and faculty members from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. today in the gymna sium. of White Hall. He will choose students from the class to partici pate in his performance. A native of Lincoln, Neb., Weidman studied under Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn. He opened his own school of dance in New York in collaboration with Doris Humphrey. This led to a series of concert performances by the group and the eventual organiza tion of the Weidman Theater Dance Co. which has toured the country since 1950. The troupe ap peared on campus last summer sponsored by the Artist Series. At Columbia University Weid man recently danced the leading role in "Poor Eddy," a dance drama based on the life of Edgar Allen Poe. He has done choreo graphy fo r Broadway musicals and the New York City Center Opera Co., and was granted a Gug genheim Foundation fellowship to prepare "Fables-of Our Times" by James Thurber in dance form. • Yeit-Gieim Captain and Mrs. Fritz Gleim of Norfolk, Va., announce the en gagement of their daughter, Betty, to Robert Veit, son of -Mr. and Mis. Harold R. Veit of Philadel phia. Both Miss Gleim and Mr. Veit are seniors majoring in physical education. Miss Gleim is a member of Lakonides and WRA. Mr. Veit is a member of Pi Kappa Phi. .. .•; f,..y, PAGE FIVE sestgagenzerti.4 be de- Lowell
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers