TH u issprnr. , put. 7,. raps ; May..- Q.OOOO ....co'Orf: T - 6.1 idittudel3o:Ceeds • May , Queen Barbara Baker• will be feted at 3:30 p.m. Saturday by a 'court of approximately 130, including%members of the hemlock chain and honor arches. attendants, maid of honor, flower girls, train bearerS,. maYpole dancers, jesters and heralds Dcince:CpncOrt Tp,lheThqrrie. co.f.Titii-Life':.-,:::: City life will be interpreted by members of the Moderri.. - ,Dance Club in the second -performance of their annual -spring 'concert 'at 8 tonight in White Hall The Combined Arts gi.hibit in the second floor lounge- of -Old Main will continue through Sun day. Both these events. are : beifig• presented .as part; of; the Com bined Arts Festival of ;the Drains., Architecture, Speecti;_ Music, - and, other related departments. Dances in the first half of the concert are based on happenings in a city.' Second half of the-pro gram consists of solo and group interpretations of various themes. Members of the dance club as sisted by Dorothy Briant,- assitt ant professor of physical educa tion, arranged choreography for the concert. Solo numbers in the first gart of the concert are by Miss Briant and Constance Paakh. Miss Bri ant dances in "Unmistakeable Awe," and, Miss Paakh will solo in a number titled "Industrial." Anna Layton reads and inter prets "Vision and Prayer" by Dy lan Thomas in opening the sec ond half of the concert. An Ha waiian dance, "Ulili E," by Nani Ku, and a trio dance, "Nostalgia," by Katherine Nicoll, Alberta Mills, and Peggy Mayberry are al so featured. Alpha" Chi Sigma Alpha Chi Sigma- rece n t l y pledged William Childs, George Dunn, G era 1 d Gehrart, David Grave, Donald Haller, James Knepp, William Lennarz, John Lyon, - Jacob Maizel, Robert Mc- Cormick, - Robert • Oakley, Paul Schorr, Sack Smith, Allen-Starkey and Norman Summer. House officers for next semester will be Robert Markley, master alchemist .Glenn MCMaster, vice master ' alchemist; Clarke . David, recorder; Kenneth Kresge, cater er; Lorin Gardner, house man- Bazaar head bg Beta Sigma Omicron Center •Hardware Saturday - May 9 9 a.m. -..1 pan. BAKED GOODS and KNKK KNACKS TWINBURGER IS A TWINBURGER IS A.. . TWINBURGER -f5 A TWINBURGER Patio. rrt DINIIL. X , . "6 -- revri 7 i_;uLA.J.E. t- . ISrir XS'TI; V ANTA Miss Baker will wear a full length strapless white net gown with, a - stole and satin train. At- tendants will . also wear full' length strapless net gowns with stoles. The maid of honor will be garbed in light blue. senior at tendant in yellow, sophomore at tendant in green, and freshman attendant in pink.. Members of the honor arche's Will wear white and members of the hemlock chain, pastel gowns. Two flower. girls will wear white dresses and carry straw baskets With small chrysanthemums: Two young boys as train bear ers will be dressed in white suite adorned with blue cornflower, boutonniers. The queen's • throne will be decorated with hemlock. Patricia _Hughes and Nancy Lusk as jesters, and Jean Yemm and Nancy Gulick as hera'ds be dressed appropriately. Repre- Sentatives -of - the Penn State Christian Association. Women's Student Government Association and Women's Recreational Asso -ciation will wear long white gowns. ' Members of Cwens and Blue Key will usher. Forty-four maypole dancers di rected by Nani Ku will perform a traditional English dance. The men's Interfrafernity Glee Club will sing four selections and the -Modern Dance Club will present three numbers. Ceremony prac tice will be held at 4 p.m. tomor row, the May Day committee has announced. Festivities will be held .in front of Old Main. In case of rain, the ceremony will be held in Recrea tion Hall. Open houses and teas will be held in women's dormi tories from 2 to 3 p.m. duo Phi Sigma Kappa New officers of Phi Sigma Kap pa are Harry Sawyer, president; Wayne Conway, vice president; Albert Boguszewski, secretary; David. Sener, treasurer; Bill Har ris, sentinel; Harry Carroll, in ductor; James McGraw, house manager; and John Godfrey,:eat erer. ager; Lynwood Boyer, IFC rep resentative; W i.ll ia m Deppe, profesSional chairman; Lyle Bar nard, historian; James . Murray, social chairman; and James 'Ang stadt, master of ceremonies: To Speak Tonight DR. ALTHEA K. HOTTEL, of the new Commis sion of Education of Women of the American Counc - 1 on Education, will discuss "Educa tion For What?" at 7:15 to night in Simmons lounge at the Women's Student Government Ass o ciation convocation: Dr. Hotta is on leave of absence as dean of women and lecturer in sociology at the Univers - 1y of Pennsylvania. Recently-elec ted WSGA officers will be in, stalled at the ceremony. Mason Re-elected H Ec Council Head Jane Mason, sixth semester home ecoinonics major, was re elected president of the Home Economics Student Council Tues day. Bernard Ambrose, sixth se mester hotel administration ma jor, and Andree Bloom, sixth se mester home economics major, were named- vice president and secretary-treasurer. Miss Mason presented the pro posal now before All-College Cab inet to provide compensations for student council presidents. •A mo tion was passed instructing Miss Mason to oppose any additional compensation. The new council will meet May 19 in the Home Economics Living Center. Wilson Wins Contest John Wilson, eighth . semester ceramics major, was awarded sec ond prize in the national student speaking contest sponsored by American Ceramics SoCiety. Wilson, president .of Keramos, ceramics honorary, spoke on "High Temperature Protection of a Titanium Carbide Cement." Suit::o . .::i.:I'll:.: -. .::.,' i s . Be .-There! C:::=2=:11 iss Penn Stci:ii tioronation Monday, May Vt... Mad Hatters Parade Carnival Parade He-Man Contest Tuesday, May 12 . • .-Cartijval Wednesday-Thursclay,,..May 1344 Hope to See You for the SPRING WEEK Fun! .40:',..P idol Discusses Cpylone . se Customs Sunny mornings with temperatures ranging around 88 degrees in the shade make Kandy, Ceylon, just like Pennsylvania in the summer, writes A. H. Imhof, associate editor of the College's agri cultural experiMent station. distant )and. which is now experiencing the peak of its two month. hot season, is about 1800 feet' above sea level. Of ien heavy thunderstorms bring rain down by the' bucketful, limiting visi bility to about 50 feet. • Imhof, who is presently on a year's leave of absence with the Food and. Agriculture Organiza tion of the United Nations, says the birth rate of, the small but heavily populated country is the highest on the globe. Almost eight people are crowded into is area of only 2500 square miles• Research Farms Because of the hot weather, the Ceylonese wear no shoes, and children under four or five years of age run about naked. Men wear long skirt-like sarongs, and worn en, as in India, wear a long gar :7-I,!nt kno - .7n as. a Imhof wrote that the Depart ment of Agriculture carries on extension activities and conducts numerous ' government research larms. He explained that each of Ceylon's nine provinces has a dis trict agricultural officer with a senior and junior assistant, agri cultural instructor, and demon strators. Schools for Farm Children One-third of the paddy (rice), which- is the chief item of diet, is grown on the island. The Department of Agriculture operates a number of schools for boys and girls on government farms. Schools of fe r one-year training programs for cultivators' children. _ Imhof's office, once occupied by Lord Mountbatten when he plot ted the entire Eastern Pacific op eration, is - located in the heart of the famous Peradeniya Botanical Gardens in a building built dur ing the war by the military. • eng.a g.erft-eitt3 Harris-Worthington Mr.• and Mrs. Alvin Worthing ton of New Hope announce • the engagement of their daughter, Martha Ann, to Mr. Donald Har ris of 'Buckingham. Miss Worthington is a sixth semester, home economics major. Mr. Harris :.is, a • fifth semester vocational industrial education major and a member of Chi Phi. • An autumn wedding is planned. Gardner Scholarship Awarded to Ruth Cook Ruth Cook, eighth semester home economics major, was awarded the $5O Amy Gardner memorial scholarship yesterday by the College chapter of Delta Delta Delta at a district meeting in the TUB. Rose Cologne, toastmistress and scholarship adviser, presented the award. Mrs. Wilson Brazer, Phila delphia district president, presided at the meeting. In addition to undergraduate :choiarship gifts from $5O to $5OO, Tri Delt awards an annual fellow ship of $lOOO to an outstanding member for graduate study in a specialized field. Suits You Right You get fine results when you have your suits cleaned for the low price of 79 cents at ?ortage Cleaners 118 S. Pugh St. on alley Especially for Your Mother. . 411 'I ..' .. ~. 2 .C2EO C3 ' . O \\ '/ ~,, 'it 1 (N • 43,1 ,, . :.,..., / 1. '..)' ..-.. ' RED LILAC •it ' •-•:.-.);. . ~. :-- ' , i MUGUET 7 /A T WEED Ai , ~--/_.: \i MIRACLE '../ DUESLE DUBELE by e k i tkA ,l C . - 562'd - k gat com , %a m : • all 4 bouquets for only 100 plus fcrX. Four different, delightful bouquets-1S oz. bottles of two famous Lentheric classics, Tweed and Miracle and two subtle florals, Red Lilac and Muguet (Lily of the Valley). 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