SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 195$ Chimes to:SpOnsor Mardi Bql.l . Tonight Chimes, junior women's hat society, will sponsor a Mardi Ball , • ,from 9 to 12 p.m. tonight in the -Temporary Union, Building in honor of the King of the Mardi Gras. Jack Jenkins and his orchestra will play for the informal dance in a Halloween setting complete with black cats, witches and .jack-o lanterns. Admission is $1.50. 'per couple. _ _ Religion - - Church Groups Hold Hayride, Parties. Tonight Several parties and a hayride are scheduled by student church groups for tonight. Hillel Foundation. will hold a "Hillelzapoppin" party at 8 to ni g Entertainm:ent will be bridge and dancing. A. Halloween dance will be given by the Grad uate Club of - Hillel at 8 p.m. to morrow.- Upperclass independents will hold a Weiner roast at 5 p.m. tomorrow. The Westminster Foundation of the Presbyterian Ch u r ch• will sponsor a "Haunted House" Hal loween party at, 8 tonight at .the Student Center.. The Young Friends and the Unitarian Student Fellowship will hold a joint hayride at 7:30 to night. Persons interested in join ing the group may contact Richard Sloane at the Friends Meeting House to make reservations( ' The groups will also meet at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow in 304 Old Main. Samuel Bayard, associate professor of English composition, will discuss "Folk Wisdom and Folk Lore." Thespians to Act At SDX Banquet Four Thespians from the recent show, "Let's Face It," will enter tain at a banquet tomorrow in honor of - new _initiates of Sigma Delta Chi, men's national profes sional journalistic fraternity. The banquet will be held at 6 p.m. in the Nittany Lion Inn. Phil Wein, ventriloquist, Su zanne Kiel and Roderick Perry, singers, and Barbara Repsha, pianist, will perform. Moylan Mills will act as master of cere monies. The banquet and entertainment will fellow initiation of ten stu-, dents and six professional men into the fraternity. Languages Department To..BrOadcos4 Musk " The - Department of Romance Languages will sponsor a radio program entitled "Music of the Nations" on Station WMAJ at 8:30 p.m. every Monday beginning this week. Professor Hugh Chapman, in structor in Romance languages, will be guest of the department on the first broadcast. He will play Spanish recordings. Constitution . (Continued from rage four) the question of holding a consti tutional convention is , `yes."--Per haps- I am too pessimistic as to the results. We do need some con stitutional changes. Let's gamble on the Complete revision method. If it" fails; we can still fall back on the regular system of amend ments. The ball will complete the weekend of carnival: festivities which began last night with . the Mortar Board Mardi Gras in Rec reation, Hall. The king • was se lected by a penny-vote system from among 15 candidates. -- Follows New Orleans Affair The ball is patterned after the New Orleans Mardi Gras Ball honoring 'the two kings, Rex and Zulu. Although the New Orleans version is traditionally held on carnival, night, several factors make this practice infeasible at the College. Therefore, the Penn State Mardi Ball has its own tra dition of occuring on the night following Mardi Gras. AAUW Scholarship Committee chairmen are Mil dred McCowan, decorations; Nan cy ..Ward, band; Polly Moore, ad vertising; Katherine . Reynolds, tickets; and Margaret Ferris, en tertainment. Proceeds from' Chimes' second annual Mardi Ball will go toward a' project contributing to an Association of American Univer sity Women. scholarship. Love to Head Grad Council Gene Love, graduate student in agriculture education, was elected president of the Graduate Student Council. Thursday ,night. Other officers ar e Kenneth Gee, vice president; William key, treasurer; Agnes Doody, sec retary; and Moylan Mills, editor of the Graduate School Newslet ter. Representatives to the gradu ate council elected recently are Joseph Eisenhuth, Max Schus ter and D. E. Dahlberg, engineer ing; Paul Burdan, Hickey and Henry Tominaga, physical educa ticin; Gee, William Shulhof and Harry Shadle, mineral industries. Owen Webster, David English and Robert Berger, chemistry; Sidney Ishee, Love and Roger_ Lea c h, agriculture; Raymond Lauer, Arthur Williams and Mar tin Wy an d, business; Rozanne Brooks, Mills and Miss Doody, liberal arts; Helen Dell, Beverly Evans and Leona Legin, home ec onomics, and Dolores Vannorman, Nicholas Troisi and William Rick er, education. Pre-Med Honorary Alpha Epsilon Delta, national pre-medical honorary, will hold initiation at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Alpha Epsilon Pi., The case of the Unapproachable Alumnus OR How do you get that gift horise to.op . en his mouth? Once there was a Wealthy Alumnus who was also a Soft Touch. Tie' an Old School Tie around your -neck and he'd , give you his shirt to go with it. One day he realized that this habit of always saying "Yes" to the Big Question was costing him a Pretty Penny. So he became a Hard Man to Get To. Letters, phone calls and per sonal visits all encountered a secre tary °with a face like a flint and a. 4-ivord vocabulary. ("He's out of town. "),7 s-r This was Rough on theDld School; but-nobody had a solittion—until the football Coach, a Brain in his own right, came up with a Magnificent but Simple. Idea. He dashed down to the Western Union office and dis; 105.. So. Allen St. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 4 STATE CIALmt.T .-. r m - 2r. et.rg Chapel to Hear Stanley Discuss 'The Wasteland' Dr. Clifford T. Stanley, profes sor Of systematic theology. at-the Protestant Theological Seminary, Alexandria, Va., will speak - on "The Wasteland" at Chapel at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab .Audi torium. A graduate of the UniVersity:of Virginia, Dr. Stanley received a- A. and M.A. degrees at the . uni versity and his E.D. from Protes tant Theological Seminary. He re ceived his Th.D. degree from Union Theological Seminary in 7Tew York City. , Dr: Stanley held. pastorates in Tyrorie and St. Louis before going to Virginia. He has contributed numerous articles to magazines and reviews and is currently pre paring for publication of a book, "Christianity and Modern Man." As part of the service, the Chapel Choir, under the direction of Mrs. Willa C. -Taylor, will sing as introit "I Have a Wondrous Joy" (Stobaus) and as anthem "Prayer for Peace" (Leonard). George E. Ceiga, Chapel organ ist, will play as prelude "Marcia Religiosa" (Rheinberger), as of fertory "Come, 0 Come, Thou Quickening Spirit (Flor Peeters) and as postlude "Postlude on St. Thomas" (Burdette). Gutkin Award Is Announced The establishment of the Bea trice M. Gut k i n engineering scholarship for freshmen, valued at $250 annually, was announced Tuesday by President Milton S. Eisenhower. The scholarship will be avail able to- a freshman in the School of Engineering who, in the opin ion of the dean of the school, shows great promise in the field of engineering and who is in need of financial assistance. The award was established by Sydney A. Gutkin of Gutkin and Beck, counselors-at-law, Newark, N.J., and honors his wife, Bea trice. Their son, Martin Gutkin, is a second semester industrial engineering major. Engineers LaVie Pix Seniors in the School of En gineering will have LaVie pic tures taken bef or e 4 p.m. Thursday. Those who have had pictures taken should return proofs to the Penn State Photo Shop as soon as possible, ac cording to Herman Golomb, ed itor. - patched a 'Telegram saturated with Old School Spirit and dedicated to the theme that unless some. Noble Soul came through pronto, the : eleven would be playing barefoot and jersey less. The ice jam was broken. k Fat Check arrived the next day. TOday things are back on a Normal Finan cial Basis. There's nothing more practical than. using 'Telegrams to Hurdle Barriers and. get to the Guy-(or . the Gal). you. want .to talk to. When. you . *mt . . ; something . . Cash from Home; a Date with - a Dreamboat, an Interview. , with the. Man who does the Hiring. . . . it pays to Make your Bid via Western Union. Telephone 6731 Comedy pla)ier.'- ' High. English comedy be featured when Players present their rendition of "Hay Fever" at 8 p.m. Thursday in Schwab Audi torium. The Noel Coward play will run for three nights. The story, which concerns, a typical weekend in the life of an eccentric English family, is similar to Kaufman and Hart's "You Can't Take It With You'! in that the relatives are extremely hemian David, played. by Kaye • Vin son, is the introvert, novelist father who invites a "winsome young thing" to the family's coun try. eate for a weekend to study her 'for a future novel. His wife, Judith, portrayed by Alice Mears, is a retired actress who still lives in a dream of past grandeur and is at any time likely to turn into one of her fornier stage roles. Invites A Friend Since the family is composed of individualists, she too invites a friend for the weekend, a young man many times her junior who obviously idolizes her as a dra matic actress. The children of these rather out-of-the-ordinary parents ar e Simon, played by Leonard Rich ards Jr., and Sorel, Nancy Dee Coul t e r. They are practically resurrections of the father and mother except that Simon is an artist and Sorel, a student. Have Unusual Tastes They are unusual in their tastes also since Simon invites for the weekend an older woman with whom he is hopelessly infatuated. Not to be outdone, his sister in vites an elderly gentleman traveler. These guests soon find they have gotten into more than they bargained for when their hosts begin to propose marriage. The various situations are such that only a olayWright of Coward's merit could present them. Unforgotten Characters His characters can not be for gotten easily for they are such distinct , personalities that they will be remembered, laughed at and sympathized with so long as comedy is present in the theater. The guests are Velma Kaiser, Ruth Fitz, Leonard Tarnowsky and Ron Taylor. Ann Frank plays the maid. Tickets for the show cost 60 cents for Thursday and $1 for Friday and Saturday and will go on sale Monday at the Student Union desk in. Old Main. Scholarship Applications Available in Old Main Students seeking scholarships may get application forms at, the Executive Accountant's office, 110 Old Main. Students should take the forms home at Thanksgiving to discuss the financial statement with their parents, and to obtain signatures required on the form. Applica tions must 'be returned by Dec. 1. to Highlight Production By .EDMUND REISS Chem Library To Be Moved Chem-Phys Student Counck has decided to make arrangements to trans p or t the Chem-Phys library from Pond Laboratory to the new Whitmore Laboratory in about two weeks. The council also voted to join with the faculty in an effort to combine Chem-Phys Open House with the Science Fair in the spring. A bottled coke-vending machine, sponsored by the Chem-Phys school, will be installed at the third floor stairwell in Pond Lab oratory. The mixer publicity committee will meet today in Osmond Lab oratory to make posters for the student-faculty mixer Nov. 11 at the Eutaw House. Yeaton Announces Player Show Cast The cast for Players' , produc tion of "Juno and the Paycock" by Sean O'Casey has been an nounced by Kelly Yeaton, - asso ciate, prifessor of dramatics. Jeannie Risler will appear in the leading role. The supporting cast, will include Samuel Schon ely, ' John Yeatman, Albert Kal son, Mary Loubris, John Krug, Deborah Peek, Diane Hamel, Harry Carroll, Velma Kaiser, Richard Weber, John Henderson, Thomas Bellin, Joseph Marko and Dominic Landro. The show will be open Dec.' 11 at Center Stage for a six-week run. Circle Kto Organize, Name Officers Monday -• Circle K, a society for .former high school Key Club members, will organize at 7 p.m. Monday in 105 Willard. Officers will be elected and a constitution approved. Former Key Clubbers interested in join ing the group may attend, accord— ing to John Lyon, temporary chairman. WRA Riflery Women students interested in beginner's instruction in riflery may sign up before 5 p.m. Mon day in, 101 White Hall, according to Mildred McCowan, WRA club chairman. PTY