TUESDAY,.APRTL.27.I9S4 1 r0t1y.0.1 : 9.e..::: -. C. - :uts :. .Grcives.:.....,-.:stqcly.--Time Dan Grove, head "prof"- on "Groovology 54," and a student at the University, spends so much time spinning records 'on his radio pro gram that he hardly has time for anything else—even studying. Aninth semester arts and letters major carrying 17 credits, Grove spends more than 30 hours a week at radio station WMAJ playing records on "Groovology" or read. Pantie! to Hear Fall Semester . Rushing Plan A tentative schedule for formal fall rushing will be announced to Panhellenic Council at 6:30 to night in, the Alpha Gamma Delta suite, 33 Simmons. Thee schedule, drawn up by Norma• Reck, rushing chairman, and: Mary E. Brewer, assistant to the dean of women, will be dis cussed . and possibly acted upon tonight, 'Louise' Moreman, presi dent; said yesterday. Other committee reports will concern scholarships offered by the Council, projects for the com ing year, and the. Panhellenic rushing' booklet. Tonight's meeting will ~be the first conducted by the - new offi cers. Other officers are Joanne Caruso, vice president; Barbara Woodward, recording secretary; Polly Moore, corresponding secre tary; and Nina Finkle, treasurer. Agenda Roll Call Minutes Officers' Reports 1.. Council Objectives Committee Reports 1. Scholarships 2. Rushing schedule 3. Projects 4. Booklet AIM Banquet Set for Friday The annual banquet of the As sociation of Independent Men and Leonides will be held at 7 p.m. Friday at the Eutaw House. Reservations for the banquet, open to any independent man or woman, may be made by. calling Robert Harding, AIM chairman, at State College 8-6661, . or. Lciretta Hunter, Leonides chairman, 418 Simmons. Tickets for the banquet will cost $2.50. Students planning to attend should make reservations by tomorrow, Henry A. Finch, associate pro fessor of philosophy, will speak. Three awards will , be presented to the outstanding independent man in scholastics, activities, an d sports. Robert Solomon, eighth se mester agronomy major, will be master of ceremonies. Cwens to Hold Fashion Show Cwens, women's sophomore hat society, will hold a fashion show and card party May 5 in Hillel Foundation. The fashion show will feature sp.,..ing clothes from the Charles Shop. Fifty cents admission- will be charged and refreshments will k served. Proceeds will help finance three scholarships to, be offered. - this semester by Cwens. SherrY Kof man, fourth semester arts 'and letters major, is chairman of the affair. Accounting Ciub To Sponsor Tour The Accounting Club will-spon sor a field trip Thursday to the American Vis cos Company in Lewistown. The trip is open to accounting majors. The group will meet at 12:15 .p.m. in tb parking lot in back of Pattee Library. Club members will provide rides. The group will tour the rayon manufacturing plant and account ing offices of the firm. WRA Executive Board Women's Recreation Associa tion 'executive board will meet at 6:30 tonight in the VIRA room in By BILL SNYDER rig. news broadcasts. When does he study? • .."To tell you the, truth, I don't know," Grove says. "I can't study at the station because of all the interruptions. And I can't study at home because. I'm always looking at the clock, wondering if it's time to go back to work." 'Non-Credit Course' The greatest thief of Grove's study time is the fore-mentioned "Groovology 54," a non-credit "course" in the latest hit records which he conducts six nights a week from 10:15 p.m. until "five before midnight,' with time out for the 11 p.m. news. The program thriv es on re quests and Grove gets them from as ear away as Alaska,. Japan, and Korea—all from former students. Among the requests are what Grove calls "phonies," designed to embarrass others. 'Stop Playing Tune' For instance he got this post card recently: "Please ignore any further requests to play- a" tune for so and so. Its from a group of smart alects in Mac Hall, and I think the joke has gone far enough." But for anyone who genuinely wants to hear a record, Grove is glad to play it. He has found that favorite recording artists of Penn State students are Nat "King" Cole, Doris Day, Frank Sinatra, and Sarah Vaughn. A record cur rently receiving lots of student requests is "Little Things Mean a Lot." A State College native, Grove developed an interest in radio ih - ork while in the army. He is also boss of his jazz combo and on his only day .off—Sunday—he usually plays a jazz concert. Grove is a non-resident mem ber of Phi Delta Theta. Occa sionally he drops in on the boys for a "cup of tea." With his full schedule of spin ning records and reading news casts, he doesn't have much time for anything else. engagernenb Seigel-Steingart Mr. and Mrs. David Steingart of Shenandoah, announce th e en gagement of their daughter Betta to Robert Seigel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Seigel of New York City. Miss Steingart is a graduate of Wyoming Seminary and is pres ently attending Harcum Junior College. Seigel is an eighth semester fi nance major and a - member of Phi Sigma Delta. Ayer-Worley Mr. and Mrs. John Worley of Lancaster announce the •engage ment of their daughter Youtha to Douglas Ayer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ayer of Lancaster. Miss Worley is employed at RCA in Lancaster. Ayer is an eighth semester chemistry major and a member of Alpha Chi Sigma. Gardner-Ober Mrs. Mahlon Ober of Altoona announces the engagement of her daughter ' Doris to Ronald Gard ner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Gardner; also of Altoona. Miss Ober is employed at the Bell •Telephone plant in Altoona. Gardner is an eighth semester petrbleurn and natural gas major • • ke- Perfect Honeymoorig9 d• oesn't just happen" YOU mist 'plan it. You'll want privacy, In beautiful surroundings, enticing meals (breakfast until 11:00), varied recreation of your awn choosing, and companions you like: other collegians, staffing life together, like yaurselves.. Write to America's unique haven for newlyweds only. Mention dates, and we'll include our helpful 'THREE HONEYMOON PLANS." THE FARM ON THE HILL - SWIFTWATER 150, PENNSYLVANIA. THE DAILY COLLEMAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANI Has Jazz Corpbo McGarey to Speak At Senior Tea Donald B. McGarey, associate professor of education, will speak on "The Legend of the Pebble Pickers" at 3:15 p.m. tomorrow in Simmons lounge at the annual tea for graduating Senior womer. Dear of Women Pearl 0. Wes ton and her staff will entertain the women at the informal tea from '2:30 to 4:30 n.m. Council to Vote On Freshman 'Amor Revision (Editorial . on page four) Freshman Council will vote at 6:30 tonight on a recommendation for revised freshman women's hours in 103 Willard. Freshman senator Barbara Hen del will. make the recommenda tion to the council. The proposal asks that freshman women be granted 11 and a 1 o'clock per missions on weekends instead of the present 10 and 1 o'clock per missions. To be effected the recommenda tion must be approved by the council, the Freshman Regula tions Board, Women's Student Government Association Senate, and the Senate committee on stu dent affairs. Hat Societies Set Deadline Today is the deadline for ap plying for membership in junior men's hat societies. Fourth and fifth semester men with a 1.0 All- University average may apply to Androcles, and fourth semester men to Blue Key. Sixth an d seventh semester men with a 1.0 All-University av erage have until 5 p.m. Thursday to apply to Parmi Nous and Skull and Bones, senior men's ha t groups. Final screening of candidates for Druids, sophomore men's hat society, will be made Sunday. Letters of application should be addressed to the hat society president and submitted at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Letters must contain the student's curriculum, address, All-Univer sity average, and activities. Co_ecbto Phi Kappa Sigma . Members of Phi Kappa Sigma were hosts to their fathers at the third annual Dad's Weekend re cently. The first event of the weekend was a father-son date party Fri day night. On Saturday the fath ers attended the National Col legiate Athletic Association box-. ing finals and "stag" party. Theta Chi Social pledges of Theta Chi for the fall semester are Alfred Klim cke, Arthur Zimmerman, Walter Paynter, William Miller, Martin .Kauffman, Fred Zimmerman, and John Musser. Theta Sigma Phi „ New officers of Theta Sigma Phi, women's professional jour nalism fraternity, will be installed at 7 tonight in the Alpha Xi Del ta chapter room. and a member of Alpha Chi Sig ma. Test Tube "Always loved to a p ksn r os o we b en e ietsa t ory h mt e 37.; u ti n be - Mysteries , ' . . head chemist is P "••••••.. x. • -'::,'" made for me.... I ett -. 1 . toll i Katie Gibbs has 4; the happy knack A . .... u.4 of matching the 4 ,4 4 ?..,. ‘.. '. ''"...,1i girl and the job." ... I' t•- ?i • u Every year hun -. . dreds of cdllege • women use Gibbs secretarial training to secure the right job and assure rapid promotion. Special Course for College Women. Write College Dean for "GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK." KATHARINE GIBBS SECRETARIAL BOSTON 16, 90 Marlborough St. NEW YORK 17, 230 Park Ave. CHICAGO 11, 51 E. Superior St. PROVIDENCE 6, 155 Angell St. MONTCLAIR, N. J., 33 Plymouth St. Lost Articles Await Retrieval at Movies Have you lost a windshield wiper or a rosary lately? If you're interested in retrieving it, try the lost and found departments of the three movie houses in State College. In the past three weeks alone, over 450 different items have been collected, 199 of which are gloves. Most of these gloves belong to women, but about one-third are children's. There seems to be no special type of glove worn to a movie. Most are white and black cotton, but there are wool, plastic, nylon, and heavy leather gloves as well as a great variety of mittens. One pair of mittens became strangely separated—one mitten at the Ca thaum and the mate at the State. The Lost Glove While tabulating this list, count ing glove after glove, the Colle gian reporter came across a white glove with a familiar coffee stain on it. When the second appeared, the embarrasing fact was estab lished—the lost gloves were hers. It was a profitable afternoon. Next to the gloves, the items lost in greatest numbers are scarves. There are men's embroid ered silk scarves, silk bandanas, and girls wool-fringed scarves. Fifty-four of them are lying awaiting their owners return. It is not hard to understand how these scarves got lost, but the four girl's neck scarves and one silk tie now in the lost and found de partment are a little puzzling. And Palmolive Soap A few of the unusual finds were a spoon, two rosaries, two pipes, a windshield wiper, a cake of Palmolive soap, two flashlight batteries, a cowboy jacket, a box of cough drops, three note books, two meal tickets, a social security card, and a paper-boy's delivery bag. At present there are 46 glasses cases but only eight pairs of glass es in the lost pile. Of 41 lost caps, there are two Air Force Reserve Officers Training. Corps hats, one Skull and Bones hat, and one An drocles hat. Wallets are the other major loss, the number in the department to taling 34. Given to Clothes Drive Lost • articles are kept foi two months and then all clothing is given to the Salvation Army or some organization sponsoring a clothing drive. The more valuable articles are kept for longer periods of time. Next time you find something missing, try the movies' lost and found first, if you don't know where you lost it. This reporter did, and it worked. Concert Blue Bond Slates 8 Appearances Eight concerts have been sched uled this spring for the Penn State Concert Blue Band. According to James W. Dunlop, associate professor of music ,3u cation and director of the band, the Blue Band will present con certs in Philipsburg, Williams port, Brookville, Franklin, an d Cambridge Springs. They will also give three concerts at the University. AT LAST ... We finally changed our display in the Western Union window. Due to the many requests, the pictures will be for sale along with 200 other extras at 60 cents each. Most of these are one of a kind and we suggest early arrival for best pick. This annual event ends Friday. The sitting deadline for Mothers Day por traits is May 2nd. PARTY OF THE. WEEK - ZETA TAU ALPHA THE LION STUDIO By DOTTIE STONE Debaters Plan Final Rounds Of Tournament Men's debate squad members will participate in the second and final rounds of a intrasquad tour nament at 7 p.m. tomorrow is second and third floor Sparks classrooms. The tournament is limited to squad members who have par• ticipated in fewer than ten de• bates. First round of the tourna. ment took place April 7. Tournament teams were select ed by drawing sides and partners but debaters compete according to class standing. First and see and place awards will be mad for each class. Debaters will ba judged by their individual speak er's ratings. Under debate will be this year': national debate topic, "Resolved That the United States Should Adopt a Policy of Free Trade." Judges will be Harold P. Zel ko, professor of public speaking Harold E. Nelson, associate pra fessor of spee c h; Harold J O'Brien, assistant professor a speech; Edward R. Gilkey, in structor in speech; and Edward Shanken and Charles Petrie graduate assistants in speech. Tournament co-chairmen a r Richard Kirschner, eighthe se mester arts and letters major, ant Benjamin Sinclair, sixth semeste: arts and letters major. Committer members are Ronald Eisenberg Sidney Goldblatt, David Meckler Donald Pripstein, and. Renal Lench. • Drama Division Sets Workshop Pennsylvania high school plat directors and students interested in dramatics have been Invited to attend the Dramatic Spring Work. shop to be held Friday and Sat• urday at the University. The workshop will present oh and new methods of acting, direct• ing, and technical managing theater production. Demonstra• tions, plays, and talks on various phases of educational theater will be included. The staff of the dramatics divi. sion will conduct the workshop according to Arthur C. Cloetingh professor of dramatics. Assisting him will be Walter H. Walters, as. sistant professor of dramatics. This will be the first workshop since the beginning of World Waa 11. It was then discontinued be cause of transportation difficulties PAGE 'FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers