PAGE FOURTEEN Formal Rushing Gets Underway Upperclasswomen may register for formal sorority rushing from 1 to 3 p.m. today and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow in the lobby of Atherton Hall. Registration fee will be $l. Rushees will meet at 11. a.m. tomorrow in 121 Sparks to hear an explanation of the rushing .procedure. Open houses will be held in sorority suites and several dormi- tory lounges from 1 to 5 p.m. to morrow and Sunday. Rushees will receive at registration a rush ing booklet which will designate' sororities which alphabetical groups of rushees will visit each afternoon. - ' Appropriate dress for open houses •is suit's .or tailored after noon dresses. Refreshments will be served by sororities. Rushees may spend as much or as little time at each sorority as they wish but open houses are held for the purpose of giving the rusheean opportunity to visit all sororities. invitations for coke dates will be issued by sororities, through the Panhellenic Post Office in Atherton Hall. Coke dates will be held from 1 to 5' p.m. and 6:30 to. 8 p.m. Monday through Sept. 24. • Rushees will pick up sorority invitations to all rushing events except open houses at the Pan hellenic Post' Office, answer them, and return them to the post of fice according to the time sched ule included in the Panhellenic rushing booklet. Appropriate coke date apparel is school clothes. At homes from 2 to 5 p.m. Sept. 26 will be simi lar to this weekend’s open houses but invitations will be issued for at homes. According to the Panhellenic rushing code, “No communication shall be permitted between a sorority member and a rushee either directly or indirectly through a third party, except when members of three sororities are present within the conver sational group.” Campus Hosts 36 Conventions ■ The University was the site of 38 conferences, institutes, and vo cational training courses this summer .when over 6000 persons assembled at the campus during July and August. Drawing the largest assem blage was the annual Department of Health Conference in August, with an estimated attendance of 1500. The American Farm Eco nomic Association Meeting, held in August, attracted an estimated 1200 persons, and over 1100- rep resentatives enrolled for the 4-H Club Week last month. . Other groups meeting here this summer included the United Steelworkers of America CIO, the Commercial Florists Conference, the Rural Recreation Workshop Folk and Square Dance Festival, and the Conference of the Stu dent Councils of Pennsylvania. Campus Chest (Continued from page two ) of $235.55. has been loft for op erating expenses this year. Most of the same groups in cluded in last year’s drive will again be included this year, Ells worth Smith, chairman, has an nounced. However, the newly formed University Christian As sociation, the Newman Club, and the Hillel Foundation will re ceive benefits rather than the for mer Penn State Christian Associ ation. The National Scholarship for Negro Students will also be added this year.. In order to .be included in the drive, organizations must reflect credit on the University commu nity and must represent the en tire University community. No drives other than Campus Chest are permitted on the campus. Most of the total contributions were received during the fall solicitations drive in which 55 per cent of ‘the students and 51 par cent of the faculty contributed $7602.81. The remainder of the money was collected through spe cial events held throughout the year. These special events included the annual Kick-Off Dance; the Ugly Man contest sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, national serv ice fraternity; Kappa Kappa Gam ma-Pi Beta Pl'i Powder Bowl;’ and the raffle of dates for the Interfraternity-Panhellenie Ball. .Sociai Cjazette WRA Open- House, 6:45 to night, White Hall Dink Debut, 2 to 5 p.m. to morrow, TUB Fun Night, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Recreation Hall Chapel, 10:55 a.m. Sunday, Schwab Auditorium Red Cross Unit Sponsors Two Blood Drives The Red Cross campus unit is an organization sponsored by the State College chapter of the American Red Cross and works in conjunction with the Johns town Blood Red Cross bloodmo bile unit to sponsor two blood drives each year. ' .The campus unit’s other activi ties are to entertain veterans in the Altoona veteran’s hospital and to send Christmas packages to Europe. The blood drives are held in both the fall and spring semes ters of the academic year and any student enrolled at the University may volunteer to donate blood. Minors must have written re leases from their parents before they can be accepted as donors. The bloodmobile comes to cam pus, usually, in November and April, and sets up headquarters in the Temporary Union Build ing. The drives last two to three days and set as a quota 300-500 pints of blood. Present officers of the Red Cross campus unit are Betty Bu chanan, chairman; Jean Yemm, secretary; and Kay Brainerd, pub licity manager. Instructor Promoted Robert E. Jones, instructor in physics, has been appointed as sociate professor of engineering research in the College of En gineering and Architecture. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN' STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA White Hall Open House Scheduled New women students will be guests at Women’s Recreation As sociation Open House at 6:45 to night in White Hall. Hat Women will conduct tours of the building, located on Shortlidge road, be tween Atherton Hall and the Temporary Classroom Building. Most of the White Hall facili ties will be available for use by the women after the tour. Patricia Farrell, club activities president, has asked that they come dressed to participate in basketball, vol leyball, and badminton. The Modern Dance Club will do exhibition dance steps for the campus newcomers. Ping pong and bridge facilities will be avail able in the game room. The swimming pool will be open at approximately 8 p.m. for a plunge hour. Tank suits and towels will be furnished. Following the plunge hour, re freshments will be served. White Hall, built in 1938, not only houses women’s physical edu cation and recreation classes, but also offers recreational facilities for individuals, clubs, and organ izations. Three basketball games can be played simultaneously in the gymnasium centrally located in the building. To the left of the gym is -the rhythm room where classes in rhythmic • fundamentals, modern dance, and square dance are taught., Each spring the Modern Dance concert is held there. Beyond the rhythm room is the playroom which is open to stu dents at all times. Here, ping pong and bridge facilities are located. In the west end of the building is a large classroom and body me chanics room. The 135,000 gallon swimming pool, 75 feet long and descending from four to 10 feet deep, is open to coeds for swimming to recorded music. White Hall also has two bowl ing alleys, a shuffleboard deck, squash court, indoor rifle range, and a fencing area. The White Hall gym and pool will be open tomorrow night, ac cording to Charlotte Klipple, play night chairman. Scholarship Established A scholarship to be awarded a fourth or fifth semester insur ance major has been established by the Penn State Insurance Club. The award will provide between $5O and $lOO for the recipient. Ratio Takes In. Home Ec Women in the College of Home Economics outnumber men six to one, All the men enrolled in the College are Hotel and Institution Administration majors, while the women are in diversified fields. Courses are offered in child development, clothing and textiles, foods and nutrition, home management, home-community rela- tionships, commercial consumer services, home economics educa tion, and home art. The three home economics hon orary societies are Omicron Nu, women’s national home economics honor society; Sigma Eia Alpha, men’s professional honorary so ciety; and Phi Upsilan Omicron, women’s home economics honor ary society. Women home economics majors may join the Home Economics Club. For the hotel .men -there is the Greeiers Club, •, The purpose of Omicron Nu is to promote scholarship, leader ship, and research as part of the world wide home economics movement. The • major activities of the group are: A breakfast to honor a fresh man woman with high scholar ship, research open house to ac quaint the students with the graduate work being carried on by. the College, and pledging, in itiation and a formal banquet twice yearly. Last year Omicron Nu held a tea for freshman and sophomore women with high scholastic standing. An award was presented to the freshman woman with the highest average. Sigma Eta Alpha is an honor society established to perpetuate bonds of friendship among those showing a determined effort to better the hotel industry. To be eligible for membership a student must have completed four semes ters and must have been enrolled in Hotel Administration at the University for at least two semes ters. He must have achieved an all- University average of 1.5 or high er and must have demonstrated qualities, such as cooperation, leadership, good personal habits, good moral conduct, and a sin cere interest in the hotel industry. The purpose of Phi Upsilon Omicron is to advance and pro mote home economics, to promote Notice! All students desiring the .best in MUSIC whether it be / Records, Sheet Music or Supplies, Textbooks for Music Students FOLLOW THIS MAP Beaver Ave. THE 1 & HARMONY, * S sh6p “.sj < „ \i HKH Corner Room I College Ave. TheHARMONY SHOP 135 S. FRAZIER OPEN EVENINGS FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER .77.-1954 a Twist College the moral and intellectual devel opment of its members, and' to establish and strengthen the bonds of friendship. Some of its major activities last year included presenting a Spring Week exhibit, holding a. Christ mas party for children, supplying a needy family with food, pledg ing and initiation, and selling cook books to raise funds. - In order to be eligible for mem bership in Phi Upsilon Omicron a woman must have reached her fourth semester. She must be in the upper two fifths of her class and must have shown definite promise of leadership ability, professional promise and a spirit of service. Every home economics major may join the Home Economics Club. The first meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 5 in 105 White Hall. The club sponsors coffee hours from 9 to 11 a.m. Monday through Friday in the Living Center of the Home Economics Building. This is a fund-raising project and all students and faculty members may attend. For the coming year the club will provide paid instructors to teach classes in scouting, clothing and textiles, and jewelry making. The Penn Stale Greeters Club is. an organization for prospective hotel men. Students in hotel ad ministration are contacted early in their first semester to welcome them and give them th§ opportun ity to become members. The club is open to students in hotel administration and is or ganized to provide a connection with the hotel industry, and to carry out social activities. The club aids in improving the present building and all aspects of the College of Home Economics. Each fall it sponsors a dance known as the Belle Hop Ball. The Greeters are largely responsible for the Penn State exhibit at the New York Hotel Show.