The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 08, 1954, Image 5

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    SATURDAY; MAY -8,. 1.9
White -to.: : Crown-
Md 7/ QUeen . . Today
Jane Montgomery, eighth semester journalism major; will be crowned May Queen to
day by Nancy- White, retiring president of Women's Student Government Association, at
ceremonies beginning at 3:30 p.m. on the lawn in front of Old Main.
Spectators' seats for the ceremonies will be reserved for parents of students participat
ing in the program until 3:20 p.m.
In case of rain the ceremonies will be held in Recreation Hall. Maud Strawn, May
Day general chairman, will an
nounce at 10-a.rn: today whether
the program - will be in front of
Old Main or•in Rec Hall.
During the' ceremony presenta
tion of the world will be made by
Barbara Wallace, retiring presi
dent of Women's Recreation As
sociation. Phyllis Richards, Penn
State Christian Association repre
sentative, will present the sceptre
to Miss Montgomery.
20 Compose Honor Arch
Twenty senior women will com
pose, the honor arch. Anna Mae
Webb, eighth semester music edu
cation major, and Patience Unge
thuern, eighth semester home eco
nomics- major, will participate in
the honor group with seniors pre
viously named.
' The processional: will begin at
3:30 p.m. from the steps of Old
Main. Testers leading the march
will be Charlotte Klippel and Pa
tricia Olkkonen.
Fifty senior women will make
up the hemlock chain procession.
Frosh to Attend Queen
Janice Brenner and Mary Dub
sow will be freshman attendants;
Eileen Marcelina and Shirley Mix,
sophomore attendants; Faith Gal
lagher and Polly Moore, junior at
tendants; and Ona Kay . Lee, and
Marilyn Buzby, senior attendants.
Four State College elementary
school students will be flower
girls and train bearers. . •
Sally Lewis. second semester
home economics major, will serve
as Maid of Honor to the queen.
The Panhellenic chorus,' under
the direction of Miss Wallace, will
sing, "Green Cathedral" and
"Alice Blue Gown."
3 Dances Scheduled
Members of the Schuhplattler
Club, organized in 1950 under the
Penn State: Christian Association,
will perform three dances built
around love, courtship, hate, and
jealousy. They will be "Nev. Bay
reischer," "The Figure Dance, ,
and "The Dance of Jealousy."
- The lnterfraternity Council
chorus, directed, by John Jenkins,
eighth, semester music educatiOn,
major, will sing "There's Music in
the , Air" and "I Had. a Dream,
Dear." . Freshman and sophomore
women will do .a May pole dance.
Open Houses Planned
Open houses will be held in
five women's dormatories' today
and tomorrow. The open houses
will be held in Thompson, Grange,
and McAllister Halls from 2 to
3 p.m. :today; in McElwain, 1:30 to
3 p.m. today; Atherton, 1 to 3 p.m.
today; Simmons, 1:30 t 0.3 p.m. to
morrow; and in Woman's Build
ing from 2 to 3 p.m. tomorrow.
Only friends of women living in
the dormitories are invited to
visit the-rooms, according to. Bar
bara Kilmer, chairman of the open
house committee. Guides will be
posted in dormitory halls.
Dormitory teas will be held
from 2 to 3 p.m. today.
Ist Queen to' Attend
Mrs. Bruce Dunlap, the first
Penn State May Queen, will be
among the guests at a tea in honor
of seven former May Queens im
mediately following the ceremon
ies. Mrs. Milton S. Eisenhower will
pour. Mrs.. Dunlap reigned as May
Queen in 1914.
The tea will also honor Mrs.
Arthur Geiger, Arlington, Va.,
1922; Mrs. William J. Sweeney,
Summit, N.J., 1924; Mrs. Charles
Kindred, .' Titusville, 1925; Mrs.
Charles Smith, Bellefonte, 1928;
Mrs. H. Aubrey Meyers, Spring
field, 1933; and Mrs. Ernest Ber
kow, Pittsburgh, 1941.
• Special Chapel Service
. The Mother's Day Chapel ser
vice will be held• at 10:55 a.m. to
morrow - in Schwab Auditorium.
Dr. Henry Pitt Van Dusen, presi
dent -of the Union Theological
Seminary, New York, will speak.
The Penn State Men's Glee
Club,- recently returned from a
tour' thrbugh Western Pennsyl
vania and New York, will give a
concert at 3 p.m. tomorrow in
Schwab Auditoritun.
By JACKIE HUDGINS
Mildred Ride Dunlap
First--May Queen, 1914
Phi Kappa Sigma
Newly elected officers of Phi
Kappa Sigma are John Cleland,
president; William Rother, social
chairman; Thomas Brasere, schol
astic chairman; William Hume,
rushing chairman; Raymond Mil
ler, recording secretary; Donald
Martin, treasurer; George Deike,
corresponding secretary; Robert
Springer, house manager; Charles
Stone, pledge master; Donald
Campbell, caterer; James Herber,
kitchen helper.
Robert• Brown was appointed
chaplain, John Albrecht, IFC rep
resentative, and George Crouse,
publicity chairman.
Alpha Gamma Delta
Georgia Dickover, and her sis
ter Gertrude, were the guestsof
honor at the annual Alpha Gam
ma Delta International Reunion
Day banquet held at Centre Hills
Country Club.
Miss Dickover is a founder of
the r sorority..
Beverly. Morgan, Marilyn
Sthadt, and Tina Kauffman were
given- dean's list awards at ,the
banquet and Jane Bishop received
the activities award. Miss Mor
gan also received the scholarship
plaque.
ORCHIDS Only $l9B
Vtiri t
innßa * g a l AT
Arriving Saturday Morning
Beautiful corsages of large,
full-grown e x o t i c orchids
normally sell for as high
as $6.00.
Complete
-- ready to pin on Mother!
THE DAILY COLLEO;;IAN STATE COLLEGE,- PENNSYLVANIA
co_echt,
Sigma Delta Tau
New officers of Sigma Delta
Tau are Carol Perlman, president;
Myrna Siegel, vi c e president;
Maxine Horoff, recording secre
tary; Grace Bassel, correspond
ing secretary; Doris Weinstein,
rushing chairman; Lea Miller,
scholarship chairman.
The group recently entertained
Sigma Alpha Mu at the :chapter
house. A skit, was presented by
the Sigma Delta Tau pledges and
refreshments were served.
Delta Upsilon
Delta Upsilon has elected -Mar
shall Dawsey president. Other
new officers are John Sherk, vice
president; Ronald Ruth, treasurer;
James 'Sweeney, recording secre
tary; George Setman, correspond
ing •secretary; Andrew Stavres,
social chairman; Robert Bai r,
house manager; George Bairey,
chapter editor; and William Duff,
historian.
Leonides to Meet
Leonides, independent women's
organization, will discuss plans
for a joint picnic with men from
the Pollock area at 6:30 tonight
in 103 Willard.
Jane Montgomery
1954 May Queen
Religion
Mother's Program
Planned
One student church grOup has planned a program for Mother's
. .
Day.
The Westminster Foundation of the Presbyterian Church will hold
a Mother's Day breakfast at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Presbyterian
Church social hall.
Members of the Roger Williams Fellowship will leave at 4 p.m.
tomorrow from the Baptist Church
to travel to Lewisburg as guests
of the Bucknell Fellowship. Sup
per will be served and a program
will follow.
Dr. George Berkheimer, secre
tary of the Central Pennsylvania
Synod of the United Lutheran
Church, will speak on "Steward
ship of Life" at 6:30 p.m. tomor
row' at the Lutheran Student As
sociation, 412 W. College avenue.
The United Student Fellowship
will hold a discussion on summer
conferences and projects at 6:30
p.m. tomorrow at the Faith Evan
gelical and Reformed Church..
The Wesley Foundation choir
will hold a vesper service at 4:30
p.m. tomorrow at the St. Paul's
Methodist Church.
The Student' Fellowship of the
St. John's Evangelical United
Brethren Church will meet at 6:30
p.m. tomorrow in the student
room. A discussion on "Sin and
Its Implications" will be held.
The Bucknell Canterbury Club
will be guests of the Canterbury
Group at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at
the Parish House of St. Andrew's
Episcopal Church, 300 S. Frazier
street. A supper will be served
followed by a group sing and com
pline.
A one-act play entitled "The
Valiant" will be given at 3 p.m.
tomorrow at the Hillel Founda
tion, 224 Locust Lane. An open
house for students and their par
ents will be held.
The Philing Station-,-
(Continued from page four)
side of the room. Technicians
stood up with their equipment on
the window sills of the room. A
television camera to get closeups
of the witness was behind the
committee's table.
After the hearings had ad
journed for the day we speeded
back in the Senate subway and
went over to the Press Gallery
in the House of Representatives.
We were welcomed by the gal
lery's superintendent who told
the leader of the .group, • "I'm
sorry you couldn't have gotten
over here earlier: we , passed
the St. Lawrence seaway bill
today after 40 years."
Did we miss something! Did we?
for fun
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Sun Glasses ...
Be protected and pretty at
the same time with sun
glasses by Solaxex. Choose
from a variety of frames de
signed to fit your face.
Social
'gazette '
Today
BASEBALL, Syracuse, double
header, 1 p.m.
IFC-PANHEL SPRING CON
CERT, after May Day Cere
monies, Old Main
LACROSSE, Rutgers, 4 p.m.
MAY DAY CEREMONIES, 3
p.m., Old Main
MODERN DANCE CONCERT,
8 p.m., White Hall
OPEN HOUSE, and teas, 2 to
3 p.m., Women's Dormitories
PICK UP STICKS, 8 p.m., Cen
ter Stage
TENNIS, Bucknell, 2 p.m.
TRACK, Pittsburgh, 2 p.m.
Tomorrow
CHAPEL SERVICE, 10:55 a.m..
Schwab
MEN'S . GLEE CLUB CON
CERT, 3 p.m., Schwab
OPEN HOUSE, noon to 5 p.m.,
West Dormitories
Jones Elected
Owens Head
Miriam Jones, second semester
home economics major, was elect
ed president of Cwens, sophomore
women's hat society, Thursday
night..
Other officers elected, were
Dorothy Glading, second semes
ter home economics major, vice
president; Rheda Berger, second
semester home economics major,
secretary; and Lee Ann Leaphart,
second semester home economics
major, treasurer.
Psi Chi to Hear Wilson
John F. Wilson, director of
psychology at the National Sci
ence Foundation, will address
membersof Psi Chi, psychology
honorary .
society, and Social Sci
ence Research Council at 8 p.m.
tomorrow in 26 Mineral Sciences.
under the
-t-r7
Sun-Bonnies
In harmony with sun and fun—
these cute novel "Sun-Bonnies."
Ideal for face shading or sizzling
summer days. Take your pick of
yellow, blue, red or natural. For
that "cool look" on warm days
its Sun-Bonnies adjustable to
head size.
$2.98
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148 S. ALLEN ST.
PAGE cIPIVE
Church'
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