The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 05, 1954, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
University Debaters
o Enter Tourney
Two teams from the men's debate squad and two from the
women's team will leave tomorrow for Mount Mercy College, Pitts
burgh, to participate in an invitational tournament.
Sidney Goldblatt and Richard Kirschner of the men's team will
debate the affirmative of the question, "Resolved: That the United
States should adopt a policy of
free trade." Debating the negative
will be David Meckler and Ben.
jamin Sinclair,
Goldblatt and Kirschner partici
pated last week in a northern
southern tournament at West Vir
ginia University. Sinclair and
Meckler debated at Boston Uni
versity Saturday against eastern
teams.
Joseph F. O'Brien, professor of
public speaking, will accompany
the debaters.
Barbara Menapase and Lois
Hummel will -assume the affirma
tive position of the free trade
question in the three-round tour
nament. Ann Leh and Margaret
Troutman will debate the nega
tive.
Kirschner, eighth semester arts
and letters major, recently won
the men's debate extemporaneous
contest, which entitles him to rep
resent the team at the State Fo
rensics Tournament March 18 to
20 at Allegheny College. George
Haines, second semester educa
tion major, placed first in the
oratory contest. He will represent
the University squad at the state
competition.
Sinclair was judged second
place winner in the extempor
aneous speaking contest and Ed
ward Klevans was second in the
oratory contest.
Each of the debaters competed
in the oratory or extemporaneous
divisions in preparation for the
forensics. Sinclair, who competed
in extemporaneous speaking at
the Boston tournament last week
end, placed second in the state
tournament last year.
Course Dropping
Ends Tomorrow
Tomorrow is the deadline for
dropping a course without the sig
nature of the dean of the school
in which the studen' is enrolled,
according to Harry •A. Sperber,
assistant scheduling officer.
The dean's signature will be re
quired after tomorrow if a student
wishes to drop a course. This au
thorization will be given only un
der special circumstances, Sperber
said.
Drop-adds may be filed in the
scheduling office, basement of
Willard.
4-H Club to Sponsor
Square Dance Tonight
The 4-H Club will sponsor a
square dance from 8 to 11 tonight
in the Temporary Union Building.
Music will be provided by the
Hayseeds. A cakewalk will be
held and a door prize given away.
A donation of 50 cents will be col
lected.
"HELL AND
HIGH WATER"
in Cinema Scone
Richard W'r.'—,-,q7
a;gx===farra
Humphrey Bogart
Jennifer Jones
"BEAT THE DEVIL"
g°!i h.
, v I W -7. • -
vmsxgrin
Clifk , n Webb
"THE STARS AND
URIPES FOREVER"
Checker Tourney
To Begin Tonight
An open checker tournament,
sponsored by the Checker Club,
will begin at 8 p.m. today in the
Temporary Union Building, Rob
ert Rush, president, has an
nounced.
The tournament will consist of
three divisions—a major and -a
minor division for men and a wo
men's division. Players eliminated
in the first ' two rounds of the
tournament will he placed in the
minor division.
Prizes will be awarded to those
who finish first and second in
each division.
Dean Weston to Return
Pearl 0. Weston, dean of wom
en, is expected to return to her
job within the next few days,
Mrs. Cordelia Hibbs, assistant to
the dean, said yesterday.
Dean Weston is recuperating at
her home in Carnegie following
an operation.
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fTE.ZnAtIN:
In crowds you'll always see
college
Those Packs of red and white-
It's Luclky Strikes tlneg.choose
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I 1
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNS4IVANIA
March Arrives
With Snow Fall
You might as well brace .your
self for more snow . . . it's March,
students are talking of Spring
Week, the baseball team is prac
ticing . . . indication enough at
Penn State that , terrible weather
is due.
Just as a starter, four inches of
snow fell on campus Tuesday.
Today? "I'll stick my neck out,"
commented the forecaster in the
Meteorology dep ar t m en t. "No
snow. Cloudy, though."
Today? "Fair and cooler," pre
dicted University weatherman
Charles L. Hosler. "No snow," he
said.
Kell to Be Speaker
At FIFA Banquet
C. J. Kell will be the guest
speaker at the 'annual banquet of
the collegiate chapter of Future
Farmers of America to be held at
7 tonight at the Nittany Lion Inn.
tomorrow.
Kell is the • retired vocational
agriculture area adviser of, Dau
phin and Schuylkill counties.
The banquet will honor the 34
seniors in vocational agriculture
who will be student teaching this
semester.
Tickets for the banquet are on
sale at the Agriculture Education
office for $2.40.
Rifle Club Practice
Rifle Club members may prac
tice on the rifle range in White
Hall at 4 or 7:30 p.m. any day.
it takes three years of steady wort(
To earn 2 Ph.D.
It only takes one pack to know
That
VSrarTerl PenY
Vprihvveeern University
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3 Application Dates
For WD Announced
Dates for filing •of applications for West Dorm rooms and food
Iservice have been announced by Otto E. Mueller, director of houiing.
Men who will be seniors next year may apply for West Dorm
housing from 7 to 9 p.m. March 16 at Nittany Dormitory 20. The first
4.20 prospective seniors with 1.0 All-University averages or better
to apply will be accepted.
Prospective juniors may file . ap
plications from 7 to 9 p.m. March
18 at Nittany Dormitory 20. The
first 60 men with All-University
averages of 1.5 or better to apply
will be assigned to West Dorm
rooms next year.
Men who will be sophomores
next year may apply from 7 to
9 p.m. March 23 at Nittany Dormi
tory 20. Applications of the first
60 men with 2.0 . All-University
averages or better will be ac
cepted.
Men who wish to room together
should apply together, Mueller
said. However, each man must
file his own application,, he said.
Two hundred and forty upper
classmen will be assigned to the
West Dorm area next year, in ad
dition to all certified medical or
rehabilitation students. These stu
dents must be certified% by a letter
from Herbert R. Glenn, director of
the University Health Service,
Mueller said.
The scholastic aver age con
sidered in room assignment will
be the student's All-University
Players' Show
To Run 2d Week
Players' production of Frederick
Lonsdale's "On Approval," goes
into its second weekend at 8 to
night at Center Stage. ,
Tickets for the comedy about a
group of people in England dur
ing the 20's are on ,sale for $1 at
the Student Union desk in Old
Main.
The show will run four more
weekends.
average at the end of the past
fall semester.
Students assigned to West Dorm
rooms will be required to pay a
$lO room reservation, key, and
damage deposit„The payment is
due within two weeks after the
notice of room assignment is sent
to the student, Mueller said. When
a student pays the deposit, he
obligates himself to live in the
University residence halls for the
full year if he enrolls at the Uni
versity, he said.
When you come right down to it, you
smoke for one simple reason . . . enjoy
ment. And smoking enjoyment is all a
matter of taste. Yes, taste is what counts
in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.
Tivo facts explain why Luckies taste
better. First, L.S./IVI.F.T.— Lucky Strike
means fine tobacco . . . light, mild, good
tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac
tually made better to taste better . . .
always round, firm, fully packed to draw
freely and smoke evenly.
So, for the enjoyment you get from
better taste, and only from better taste,
Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a-pack or a
carton of better-tasting Luckies today:
COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LOCKIES
A comprehensive survey—based on
31,000 student interviews and super
vised by college professors—shows that
smokers in colleges from coast to coast
prefer Luckies to all other brands! The
No. 1 reason: Luckies' better taste!
FRIDAY, MARCH 5. 1954
ItLU
NER,
PRESNER„
smoarmaik