The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 29, 1953, Image 1

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    7 Council
Elections
Start 'Today
-Students of seven schools will
vote 'for 'school council members
tciday and tomorrow.
• Four• officers and two represen
tatives to each class will be elected
to • the 'Phys Ed Student Council
today and tomorrow
,by Phys Ed
students in their activities classes.
Freshmen, 'sophomores, and jun
iors will vote for officers; while
all classes will elect representa
tives.
Write-in 'votes will be accepted
on. all Engineering Student Coun
cil "ballotS. At least - two persons
must -be' nominated for each couri
cil seat;Write-in votes area neces
sity for'. some positions. Students
can vote at a station set up on
the Mall -in front of Main Engi
neering, or. in -case of bad weather,
in th e Engineering Library in
Main' 'Engineering.
Eight sophomores, ten juniors,
and five senior senator positions
will be filled by the• Liberal Arts
council elections today and tomor
row 'in front of Sparks, weather
permitting, or in the lobby of
Sparks.
' Education student's will vote Tor
sophomore,- junior, - and senior
couricil members today and tomor
row in 105 Burrowes, or weather
permitting, on the steps . of Bur
ro Wes: All 'second throug seventh
semester students are eligible to
vote. -
Chemistry. and. Physics Student
Council will hold elections both
days in the lobby of Osmond to
elect four juniors, four sopho
mores, and two freshmen. •
Voting for• Home Economic
coimcil• members will take place
today and lomorroW in the Main
Lobb y of the Horne Economic
Building.
Mineral Industry students will
also vote for council members to
day and tomorrow.
Agriculture Student Council
does not hold 'general elections,
because members are elected
throughout the year by clubs.
Retiring Dean
To Be Honored
Dr. Edward Steidle, who •will
retire June 30 after 25 years , as
dean of 'the School of Mineral In
dustries, will be honored . Saturday
by Pennsylvania industrialists,
students, alumni and faculty at a
dinner at the Nittany Lion Inn.
A full-length portrait of -Dean
Steidle,- - -painted by Malcolm S.
Parcell of Washington, Pa., will
be presented - by. alumni and 'fac
ulty of the School of Mineral In
dustries. David' Fleming, retiring
MI council president, will present
Steidle with a gold watch and a
scroll of acknowledgment.
George H. Deike of Pittsburgh,
president of Mine Safety 'Appli
ances Co., a trustee and graduate
of the College, will make the pre
sentation- of the painting. Edgar
C. Weichel of Scranton, also 'a
trustee, will . accept- the painting
for the College.
ElbUrt F. Osborn, Dean Stei
dle's successor, will be the first
speaker at the dinner. Lewis E.
Young, consulting mining engi
neer of 'Pittsburgh and past presi
dent of the American Institute of
Mining and. Metallurgical Engi
neers, will also speak.
SU • Directory Deadline
Names of newly elected officers
of clubs,- honor societies, fraterni
ties, -sororities, and other recog
nized campus groups should be
turned - in at the Student • Union
desk in Old Main before Maya 8
to be included in the new Student
Union directory.
WEATHER
TODAY'S
SCATTERED
SHOWERS
WARNER
•
4 Itr
.VOL. 53, No. 132
Wayne Names
In .'Miss ..-- State':
Mary Braun
Madeleine Sharp
Ugly
Will
Today is the beginning of the Ugly. Man identification contest,
With the object being to identify the most Ugly Man contestants
correctly from their pictures on display in' the downtown window of
the Western Union Co. The person who identifies the most contest
ants correctly Will receive• a ticket to the Senior Ball.
Blood Donation
Deadline Set
The deadline for Red Cross
blood drive pledge slips' and re
lease slips for minors, is 5 p.m.
Friday. All slips should be turned
in at the College Placement office,
112 Old Main.
The • drive, sponsored by th e
campus Red Cross unit, will begin
May - 11 and extend through May
13. Donations will be made from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at tie Temporary
Union Building.
Persons • donating • blood should
have at least one hour, and.-pref
erably two, free at the time bloOd
will be donated, according to Red
Cross officials.
Pledge and release slips may, be
obtained from dormitory presi
dents or from the College Place
ment office.
Banquet Ticket. Deadline
Tickets for the Forestry Society
banquet will be available until
noon today - at the main office of
the Forestry Building 'and from
members of the society.
The banquet will be held 6:30
p.m. Friday at the Nittany Lion
Inn.
STATE COLLEGE, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 29, 1953
Sara Ann Updegraff
(`Miss Penn State' Finalists)
Man Contest
Begin Today
Entrance Fee 10 Cents
Students who wish to enter the
identification contest, after look
ing at the composite picture of the
ugly men in costume and makeup,
should list contestants from one to
48 and try to identify as many of
them as possible. The person who
identifies the most ugly. men cor
rectly will be the winner.
A dime must accompany each
entry. It should be fastene,d to - the
entry slip with scotch tape and
submitted to the Student Union
desk in Old Main.
To Receive Letters
Any student is eligible to enter
the contest, with the exception of
brothers and pledges of Alpha Phi
Omega. The identification contest
deadline is Tuesday.
Sponsored each year by Alpha
Phi Omega, national service fra
ternity, the Ugly Man •popularity
contest will be . held May .6-8 as
part of Spring Week. The contest
ants will participate in a parade.
Ugly Man will be • the contestant
who receives the most penny votes
during the three day contest.
Ugly. Man contestants will soon
receive a letter giving the details
of the Ugly Man parade, according
to Peter Huff, chairman of the
contest.
Also on display in the Western
Union Co. window starting today
is the gold trophy to be given to
the
.organization sponsoring the
winning Ugly Man.
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
Kay Lloyd
11 Men Seek
Officers' Posts
On AIM Board
Eleven men will vie for offices
in the Association of Independent
Men at a meeting of the Board of
Governors at tonight in 102
Willard.
Seeking the presidency of AIM
are. Lewis Goslin, sixth semester
geophysics and geochemistry ma
jor, Chester Cherwinski, sixth se-.
mester labor management rela
tions major, and Joe Somers, sixth
semester mining engineering
major.
For the vice presidency, Robert
Harding, second semester chemi
cal engineering major and Robert
Solomon, sixth semester agron
omy major, have been nominated.
Leonard Goodman, fourth se
mester pre-law major; Jay Byerly,
second semester arts and i letters
major; Richard Rigling, second
semester physics major; and An
drew Jaros, seventh semester arts
and letters major; are running for
secretary. Duane Holm, sixth se
mester forestry major, and Shel
doniOdland," second semester ar
chitectural major, are seeking the
treasury post.
Each candidate will be pre
sented to the Board of Governors
by the person nominating him.
Additional nominations may be
made from the floor, however,
Ross Clark, chairman of the AIM
elections committee daid.
A transcript showing an All-
College average of 1.0, or higher,
must also accompany a nomin
ation •of a candidate by the Board
of Governors, Clark said.
Pivot on Sale Today
The fourth issue of Pivot, cam
pus poetry. magazine, will be sold
for 25 cents on the Mall and at the
Corner Room today.
The 20-page magazine contains
dramatic and light verse. Twenty-.
five students have contributed to
this issue.
3 Exams„ in 24 Hours
Qualifies as Conflict
Students who have three ex
ams scheduled in a, 24 - h o u r
period are qualified to file con
flict cards, according to the
College Scheduling office.
Thus; if a student should have
two afternoon or night exams
scheduled and an additional
exam scheduled before
may
the folloWing day, he may file
a conflict card at 2 Willard not
later than May 5.
Graduating seniors having
examinations scheduled later
than 7 • p.m. May 27 should file
conflict •cards, according to a
recent change reported, by the
Scheduling office. . : .
rgiatt
Finalists
Contest
Mamie to Give
Winner Crown
In - Rec Hall
Mary Braun, Kay Lloyd, Sheila,
Rosenson, Madeleine Sharp, and
Sara Ann Updegraff will vie for
the title of Miss Penn State dur
ing the 1953 Spring Week activi
ties, Nancy D. White, coronation
co-chairman, has announced. Five
finalists were chosen from 72 con
testants by movie actor John
Wayne.
Miss Penn State will be crowned.
by Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
wife of the President, at 8 p.m.
May 11 in Recreation Hall. The
winner will be chosen from the
finalists by a committee which
will be announced later.
Rosenson Education Major
Miss Braun is a fourth semester
education major from Pittsburgh.
She is sponsored by Sigma Nu.
Miss Lloyd, sixth semester arts
and letters major from Shamokin,
is sponsored by Alpha Gamma
Delta.
Miss Rosenson, fourth semester
education major from Elizabeth,
N.J., was entered in the contest
by Theta .Chi and Sigma Delta
Tau. Miss Sharp is,an eighth
semester arts and leters major
from Herndon, Va. She is spon.-5
sored by Kappa Alpha Theta.
Miss Updegraff, eighth semes
ter arts and letters major, is spon
sored by Chi Omega. She is from
New Cumberland.
Kaye to Dedicate Song
Gifts from State College mer
chants and national advertisers
will be presented to the queen.
The five finalists will compete in
Lentheric's national Lilac Queen
contest. The winner of this 'con
test will receive a ten-day "aI.U ,
expense trip to Cuba for -two.
Sammy Kaye and his orchestra
will dedicate "Red Lilacs," a new
ly released song, to the queen
and her court at Senior Ball;
May 15.
Each of the organizations spon
soring . a finalist in the Miss• Penn
State contest will receive 'lOO
points in the- Spring Week com
petition. The winner's sponsor
will receive 150 points.
Merger Planned
For Thespians,
Masquerettes
A decision to merge Thespians,
men's musical comedy society.
and Masquerettes, women's musi
cal comedy group, into a single
organization has been made by
members of the two groups,-Rich
ard Brugger, Thespian president,
has-announced.
Under the merging plan Thes
pians will stand under its present
organizational setup with ' Mas
querettes being dissolved and its
members initiated into the for
merly • all-male society,, Brugger
said. Initiation will be held May 6.
"We felt that some merger was
necessary," he said. "For several
years women have been doing an
equal job with the men on Thes
pians' productions without equal
recognition." They were never a
part of the. actual organization
which puts on musical -comedy
shows on campus, he said.
Thespians presents two shows
each-year with member's choosing
the playS to be presented and
supervising the choice of persons
to' work on those plays.
One of the oldest organizations
on campus, Thespians may have
started when the College was
founded, Brugger said. Until 1941
women .were not permitted to act
in or work on Thespian showi.
FIVE CENTS