FRIDAY,: NOVEMBER 6, 1953 I Fraternities Set Dances for Tonight • Steven fraternities will hold houseparties tonight to begin Junioi Mity. celebrations. Parties will be held at Alpha Epsilon Pi, Kappa Alphh Psi/ Phi Epsilon Pi, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Alpha Mu and Zeta Beta Tau. ~ 'fTtusty Burke and his orchestra will provide music for Alpha Ep silon Pi's annual pledge dance, i The semi-formal dance will be open at 9 p.m. A jam session will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. The music will be by Burke, and | the session will be open. - “Record Theme” .will be spon | sored by Kappa Alpha Psi, Guests will come dressed as titles of pop ular records. Dancing to record ings will be held from 9 p.m. un til 2 a.m. , Phi Epsilon Pi will hold, a for mal dinner' dance. The Melody- Men will' furnish rhythm for the semi-formal.;-. A cocktail party with Jim El iott and -jiis orchestra furnishing entertainment will be held at Phi Kappa Tau. , Mike Rosenfeld and his orches tra will play at Phi Sigma Delia's dinner dance. Dancing will be from 9 p.m. until 1:30 a.m. Doors will be open for the dance. “Duffy’s Tavern” will prevail at- Sigma Alpha Mu. Bar room decorations and appropriate cos tumes will furnish atmosphere. The party will be open. Walk up a gangplank and into Zeia Beta Tau. Lifesavers will furnish background for the sea fearers strolling the plank. Dick Marsh anddiis orchestra will pro vide the music. Religion— Church Groups Meet Tonight Several student church group will hold social meetings, tonight Wesley Foundation of I .the Meth odist Church will hold open hotise and' a taffy pull at 7:30 tonight at the foundation. • The Lutheran Student Assocxa-' tion ‘will sponsor a bowling and roller skating'party at 7:30 ta .night. Students will meet at the Church Student Center. Hillel Foundation, will hol d Sabbath Eve services at 8' tonight' at the foundation, 224 iS. Miles, street. Rabbi Benjamin M. Kahn will officiate. Westminster Foundation of the Presbyterian Church will hold a fall retreat Nov. 13 to 15. Those interested may register for the" re treat by Sunday. • 2 Business Profs Honored in Book Two faculty members of the School of Business are. listed in the 1953 edition of “Who’s Who in Commerce and Industry,” pub lished by the A. N. Marquis Col They are Dr. George L. Lefflef,: director of planning for the. School of Business and professor of fi nance, and Dr. Sheldon C. Tan ner, professor of business law. Weekend Hours Upperclasswomen will receive 2 a.m. permissions for ..the Junior Prom tonight and 1 a.m. permis sions tomorrow night. Hours -for freshman women this, weekend will be 1 a.m. tonight and;mid night tomorrow night. ..The annual, colloquy on politics arid religion, which begins tomor row will feature five events dur ing the three-day program. Mrs.. Genevieve Blatt, director of the Intercollegiate Conference on -Government, will open the colloquy when she speaks on “Faculty and Student Freedom” at the faculty dinner at 7 P-m. tomorrow at the Autoport. Norman Thomas, colorful elder p o'l itic ia n who unsuccessfully sought the United States presi dency, six times on the Socialist party ticket, will also discuss the theriie of the three-day program, “Freedom—Can We Risk It?” Block io Lead Sponsored by:the Penn State. Christian; Association, the Depart ment of Political Science and the junior class, the colloquy will, be conducted by William Block, joint owrier and publisher of the Pitts burgh - .Post-Gazette, Mrs. Blatt, Buell - Gallagher, president of the City College of New York, and Thomas. Dr. 'Gallagher, author, preacher and former assistant commissioner of education, of the United States, will speak at Chapel service on “The Meaning of Freedom” at 11 a.m. Sunday in Schwab Audi torium. McElwain lounge will be scene- of a tea in honor of the four guests from 3 to 5 p.m. Sun day. '. Kent- Forster, associate profes sor of history, will serve as mod- XMAS TRIPS BY AIR - BY SEA Literature Reservations Tickets STATE COLLEGE TRAVEL BUREAU wsi^!L C U ,ee * Hotel Phone 7136 Neoabknua Jo Gettic By AL MUNN Fulbright Winner Named Visiting Ceramics Prof Dr. Megumi Tashire, of Kyoto University, Japan, has been ap pointed visiting professor of cer amics at the College for one year under a, Fulbright grant. He will work with Dr. Wolde mar A: Weyl, professor of glass technology, on research on the constitution an d properties of glass and enamels.. . Checker Club to Play The Checker Club will meet the Clearfield Eagles, at 8. tonight,in the; Temporary Union Building. erator at a symposium, to be held at 7:30 p.m.' Sunday in 121 Sparks. The speakers will discuss aspects of this year’s topic including threats to political freedom and problems qf freedom oh the cam pus. - Will Discuss Campaigns Thomas will discuss “Reflec tions on My Six Tries for the Presidency” at a meeting designed for students interested in political science at 10 a.m. in Little Thea tre, in Old Main. At 11, the pro gram will be turned open to stu dent , questions and informal discussion. An address by Thomas on “Free dom:- Yesterday and Today” will conclude; the colloquy at 8 p.m. Monday, in 121 'Sparks. Kirk Gar ber, president of PSCA, will serve as chairnian of the program. Alice Murray, seventh semes- Reservations for Mother's Day Week end will be accepted Saturday, Novem ber 7th af 8 a.m. Written requests only. These will be dated to be confirmed by mail. Please do not request more than one room. Thank you. The Nittahy Lion Inn «<i5v,...v.v,viv.v.,w.v..v..v.-.v-.-.-.-.-.,-.-. .v.. •■• . r«w»w.s v>-, V.W.V.V..'.V. .V.V.V., .v.y,,,\ ,v,r.i *V: tVyyAV/' iV! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Mortar Board Treasurer Requests ixpense Lists Ethel Brown, treasurer of Mortar Board, senior women’s hat society, asks that chairmen of Mardi Gras committees turn in a -bill for their expenses no later- .than No'’. 11. Women may submit expense ■isos for reimbursement to Miss Brown in 422 Sir \mons. Correspondent Will. Address •Journ Coeds About 180 women journalism majors have been invited to the annual tea of Theta Sigma Phi. women’s national journalism hon orary, 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday in Ath erton lounge. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty, "Washington newspaper woman and radio-television commentator, will discuss her recent trip around the world. Oh committees for the tea are Mary Jameson and Margaret Tro lier, invitations; Lenore Kahano witz, name tags; Tlene McKenzie, refreshments; Eliza Newell, ar rangements; Virginia Bowman and Evelyn Kielar, cleanup. President Nancy Gemmill and Grace Shoffstall, vice president, will pour. Chem-P'hys_ Mixer Will Be at TUB The chemistry-physics student faculty mixer will be held Wed nesday at the temporary Union- Building, and not at the Eutaw House as previously announced. The mixer will provide an op portunity for chemistry-physics majors to become acquainted with professors. The mixer is open to students in the school. Pre-Med Honorary Initiates Six Students Alpha Epsilon Delta, national pre-medical honorary fraternity, initiated Marie Vail, Joseph Be secker, Jean Cronstedt, Malcolm Katze, Gilbert Seigworth, and El mo Lilli Sunday night at Alpha Epsilon. Pi. - - ' ter education major, is. chairman of the .general committee for the colloquy.' Students serving on committees for - the annual three day program are Harry Shank, Ann Patterson, Linda Jacobs, Dorothy Osterhout, Doris Hum phrey, Duane Holm, and Sylvia Crum. Association members will serve -as ushers. Faculty consultants are the Rev. Luther. Harshbarger, College chaplain and executive secretary of PSCA, Mary Jane Wyland, pro gram coordinator of the Christian Association,. Dr. John H. Fergu son, professor of political science, Dr. Robert 8... Patrick, associate professor of education, Dr. War ren B. Miller, associate professor of chemistry, and Dr. Neil Reimer, assistant professor of political science. NOTICE 6 Faculty Advisers Confusion Prevails In Co-op Apartment Ever live in a home of mass confusion? Imagine trying to study for that tough exam , with loud wails of a baby coming from the floor below. Imagine trying to make a ■ meal in a kitchen with two other families trying to do the same thing with the same stove, sink, and refrigerator. Add all these complications to gether, with a second baby, two more kitchens undergoing the same treatment and seven fami lies from all over the state with different ideas about everything, and you have .what is known as complete hysteria, or a “coopera tive” apartment seven students trying to go to school and live with their families at the same time. All kinds of families, including newlyweds, live in the,apartment, from the West Virginia wife who likes her fried mush to the Penn sylvania Dutch fraulein who likes her Snitz' and Knepp. . Mixed aromas rise from the kitchens to all the rooms. To find out what the neighbors are having, for supper, one needs only to ’open the bedroom door and get a whiff. Newest Couple The newest couple is Jim, a sen ior, and Janet, a junior, married only one month. They’re from the western part of the state, and are usually the noisiest. Jim is a Re publican and Janet is a Democrat, a relationship two steps below the Hatfields and the McCoys. Shortly after arriving at State College, Janet unpacked a -per sonally signed photograph in a glass frame to a prominent lady Democrat, one of Janet’s political friends. She laid the picture on the bed and left the room. Jim, at the same time, decided to knock some cobwebs from the ceiling. He stepped on the bed in his stocking feet and unknow ingly crunched the picture! No Cooked Supper You can imagine the explosion that resulted when Janet returned, ahd poor innocent Jim went with out a cooked supper that night. Another newlywed couple, Don, a Korean vet, and Billie, a school teacher, also make a little noise at the wrong times. Don’s favorite pastime is going on bird walks at 4 a.m. Naturally, his faithful West Virginia wife follows wherever he may. wander. However, both of them in combat boots trying to tiptoe down the two flights of stairs &t 4 a.m. is slightly ridiculous. . Back by Breakfast They’re usually back to the house by breakfast time, and they go into ecstasies about the yellow bellied sapsucker or the white breasted nuthatch they saw. Then the next time they get a chance —there .they go, clomping out. to view "nature at its loveliest. Then there’s another Don, with his new acquisition, Shirley, also from' western Pennsylvania. Don’s favorite pastime is study, study, study. Everyone’s seen the type. The trouble is, he almost forgets about Shirley in his vigorous pur suit of knowledge. The only time Crnimmmm Clark Gable Ava Gardner . . "MOGAMB®" Jeff Chandler Marilyn Maxwell "EAST OF SUMATRA" Montgomery Clift Ann Baxter "l CONFESS" By JIM JACOBY he realizes she’s around is when she calls him for supper. She’s a terrific cook, but all the compliments Don ever pays her would make one think she can’t cook at all. If something is really terrific, he’ll say. “What did you sav dear? The cake? Oh, it was OK”. So that just about leaves Shirley with her only friends, the pots and pans. Generally, if she seems forlorn, and is puttering around the kitchen, trying to think of something new and ex citing to make-for her beloved husband, it’s ten to one that Don is upstairs, studying, studying, studying. The one and only physicist in the place often shows off his great talent by mixing special formu las. Baby formulas, that is. Joe, a senior, and his wife, Loretta, have a two-month-old daughter, and are considered the “old mar ried couple.”. Imagine a serious-minded ex perimenter trying to mix the fol lowing chemicals amid screarn ings louder than a radio gone mad: one part Similac plus, two parts water. Shake well. Pour in fo eight decahedron shaped cylin ders. Place into sterilizer filled with water and heat until steam escapes for 1200 seconds. Open Sterilizer Then Joe opens the sterilizer., takes out the baby’s formula bot tles and a short while later, little Cynthia is sound asleep, and our hero has won the battle. Science triumphs over hunger! Actually, life may not be so bad as it seems in the kind of conglomeration as these couples make up, but everyone respects the other’s little quirks and.it’s one big happy family. At any time, any day, anything like these incidents may happen, and the “cooperative” home often turns out to be just a co-op of laughs every day in the year. Phslotes Members and pledges, of Piul otes, independent' women’s social organization, were entertained at the Beaver House. Beaver House pledges entertained with a skit after the dinner. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers