TUESDAY. MARCH 22. 1955 Women's Primaries Are Today Primary voting for - Women’s Student Government Association and Womeri’s Rccremldn Associa tion offices, and Mftx Day Queen and her court will 'Be .held from 10 a.m. to S p.m. today, and from 6:15 to. 7 tonight. Voting polls will be set up in Thompson, McAllister,.-.Atherton, Simmons, and McEtWfiilJ:'. Halls. Town women and Residents .of Woman’s Building, McAllister atld Grange, will .vote in McAllister Hall. . In the WSGA and'WftA-elec tions, the two women deceiving the highest number of Vptds for each office today will run ,in the , final elections on Thursday. Final ists for May Queen, freshman Maid of Honor, and' freshman at tendant for the May Court will be chosen today. Final elections for these positions will also be held Thursday. Junior and sopho more May Queen attendants will be elected today. Voting for WSGA president will be held on Thursday only. Ruh , ner-up for WSGA. vice president .will» become one of two junior senators. Forty-one candidates will com pete for the offices of WSGA president, vice president, treas urer, senior senator, junior sena tor, sophomore senator, and town Jenator. WRA officers to' be elect ed are president, vice president, sec r e t a r y-treasurer, sophomore representative, intramurals chair man, and assistant intramurals chairman." May court positions include May Queen, junior, sophomore, and. .freshman attendants, an c freshman Maid of Honor. Run ners-up for queen will be senior attendants. All women students are eligible to vote in the elections. Voting lists will be used to check' oi ! voters.., House Hears Vending' Plan Vending machines for soft drinks or cigarettes may not be placed-in residence halls, Wo men’s Student Government Asso ciation House of Representatives learned last week. Diane Edelman, appointed to , look into the idea of vending ma chines in the residence halls, re-r ported that other types of ma chines, such as for milk or coffee, may. be possible! Fay Hilberg was appointed to look into the question of ironing boards in sorority suites. House will meet at 6:30 p.m. March 31 in the ■ Grange- play room. ■ ‘ - Panhel Postponed The meeting of Panhelleriic Council scheduled for tonight has been postponed until March 30. The council will elect officers at that meeting which will be held at 6:3o’p.m. in the initiation room of McElwfein hall. (girls I fSfopln | fSelecl a Tofe Bag | 5 They are the ideal carry-all E E for those things which you, § 5 just have to take with you. 5 5 Smart looking, practical, = § and priced right, the tote § 5 bags are available in blue, E S brown, pink, gray, black or § E paisley prints. Priced from § E $1.98 to $3.98. . § ! MARGARET SHOP ! mm m S 202 S. Allen St. - AD 8-6748 | oh m CZo~£ditA Officers Of Alpha Gamma Delta are . Judith Newell, president; Barbara Richards, first vice pres ident; Margaret Ross, second vice president; Maureen Flannery, re cording secretary; Lois Cowden, corresponding secretary; Jane Tressler, treasurer; Gayle De- Bonis, social chairman; Linda Salzberg, rushing chairman; and Barbara Nicholls, assistant rush ing chairman. Susan Kunkel, Sara McAlpine, and Katherine Reid are new pled ges of Alpha Gamma Delta. .Sigma Phi Epsllomrecently in stalled the following officers: Richard Carrick, president; George Zafis, vice president; Don ald Capuano, secretary; Gibson Hertler, treasurer; Alan Kirk, as sistant treasurer; William New ton, historian; Norman White horse, all-university guard. • -Nancy Coulter was recently ini tiated into Pi Beta Phi. Alpha Tau Omega has initiated David Blatchford,. John Hamilton, Augustus Mercurio, Thomas See man, William Stappenbeck, Ar thur Tennyson, David Turner, and Robert Weil. , Relia Evans has been ribboned by Beta Sigma Omicron. . . . for every formal affair . . always look your very best ...Stop at I lufjst Been away in a "never never" land, skiing and haven't had hme to select and make up any OK Joe ads. But in the past week with the A.O.P.'s and others, I ve seen at least seven who could easily qualify with no trouble at all. For example, Gerry McKenna, Grace DeMartino, Linda Gerber, Barbara Gross, Jean Scegli ano, Belva Syryga and sparking Elly Ross. If you can't afford Europe this summer, don't fret. Exactly 485 miles from this boro lies a remarkable city! continental down to its scrambled eggs. It's almost un fair for one city to have so many beautiful women, such superb restaurants and such warm, friendly people. Why, when I think of it, it's even nicer than State Col lege. If you haven't guessed by now, it's Montreal. And if you're a skier, some of the finest skiing you'll ever find tan be had in the Laurentians at Mt. Tremb lant, a mere hundred miles north of Montreal. It's not unusual to ski there until May 15th-an ideal spot for your Easter vacation. You can ski all day long, enjoy excellent cuisine and stay at a first class motel for about nine dollars a day. If you scoot down to Montreal for the evening, add a few more dollars on to it, contingent of course, on your appetite for entertainment. . . Fine Scotch and English wearing apparel are just some of the things you can bring back at relatively low prices. Don't miss it. Best parties of the week were the Miami Triad, Gamma Phi Beta and Pi Beta Phi. An opening for one more sorority or fraternity composite this semester. First call gets it. bill coleman's lion studio the Daily :OLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Six Will Vie For Quill Girl Women students will elect Quill Girl, woman leader to be honored at the annual Matrix Dinner, from six candidates dur ing Women’s Student Govern ment Association and Women’s Recreation Association Elections today. Eligibility for the title, which formerly was restricted to the presidents of WSGA, WRA, and Mortar Board, has been extended to include the presidents of Le onides, Panhellenic Council, and Scrolls. ■The Matrix Dinner, sponsored by Theta Sigma Phi, women’s na tional professional journalism fra ternity, will be held at 6:30 p.m., April 26 at the Nittany Lion Inn. Invitations to the dinner will be sent to outstanding women on campus, dormitory hostesses, arid other women connected with the University. Tickets will be priced at $3. Other awards to be presented at the dinner are Matrix Girl and Cap Girl. Matrix Girl, chosen by the members Of Theta Sigma Chi, is an award for the outstanding senior woman who has not re ceived recognition by member ship in a hat society. Cap Girl, chemical [7] 7 f reaction kILJL Exclusive "stain- , frrKJ&iPla shy" finish on AFTER SIX formal jr jackets spurns YJm most stains—even 1 \\ \ lipstick! Suave i- 'HI styling, easy, L HH ’’natural" fit, I V 7 budget prices. IX HM. Have more fun ISg -go Sincerely, AD 7-4454 r r/i I (gfe\l UCA Will Sponsor Squdre Dance In HUB The University Christian Asso ciation will hold a square dance from 6:45 to 9 tonight in the Het zel Union Building. Donald Kaelin, ninth semester dairy science major, will call and the Nittany Valley Boys, a tnree piece square dance orchestra, will play. Kevin Gelderman, sixth se mester business administration major, will instruct square and folk dancing techniques from 6:45 until 7 p.m. The dance is open to the public. EUB Group to Meet The student fellowship of St. John’s Evangelical United Breth ren Church, will sponsor a fel lowship breakfast following the the members of Theta Sigma Phi, is an award made to the out standing senior woman who has been a member of a hat society I’VE GOT NEWS FOR YOU It is my earnest hope that an occasional column of mine has pleased you enough to make you want to clip it out and keep it. But I’m sure that being preoccupied with more important things like getting down to breakfast before your room-mate eats all the marmalade the impulse has passed and been forgotten. So I am pleased nowto report that the makers of Philip Morris Cigarettes, bless their corporate hearts, have published a booklet called MAX SHULMAN REVISITED, which contains six of my favorite columns, along with some brand new material, all of this profusely illustrated—all of this available to you gratis when you buy a couple of packs- of Philip Morris at your favorite tobacco counter on or near your campus. But this is not the only news I’ve got for you today. Following you will find a roundup of news highlights from campuses the country over. Southern Reserve University Dr. Willard Hale Sigafoos, head of the department of an thropology at Southern Reserve University and internationally known as an authority on primitive peoples, returned yesterday from a four year scientific expedition tQ the headwaters of the Amazon River. Among the many interesting mementos of his journey is his own head, shrunk to the size of a kumquat. He refused to reveal how his head shrinking was accomplished. “That’s for me to know and you to find out,” he said with a tiny, but saucy grin. Northern Reserve University. Dr. Mandrill Gibbon, head of the department of zoology at Northern Reserve University and knovgn to young and old for his work on primates, announced yesterday that he had received a grant of $80,000,000 for a twelve year study to determine precisely how much fun there is in a barrel of monkeys. Whatever the results of Dr. Gibbon’s researches, {his much is already known: what’s more fun that a barrel of monkeys is a pack of Philip Morris. There’s zest and cheer in every puff, delight in every draw, content and well-being in every fleecy, flavorful cloudlet. And, what’s more, this merriest of cigarettes, king-size and regular, comes in the exclusive Philip Morris Snap-Open pack. A gentle tug on the tab and the package pops obligingly open. A gentle push on the open pack and it silently folds itself back, sealing in the savory vintage tobacco until you are ready to smoke again. Eastern Reserve University The annual meeting of the American Philological Institute held last week' at Eastern Reserve University, was enlivenei by. the reading of two divergent monographs concerning the origins of early Gothic “runes,” as letters of primitive alphabets are called. Dr. Tristram Lathrop Spleen, famed far and wide as the discoverer of the High German Consonant Shift, read a paper in which he traced the origins of the Old Wendish rune “pt” (pronounced “krahtz”) to the middle Lettic rune “gr” (pro nounced “albert”). On the other hand, Dr. Richard Cummerbund Twonkey, who, as the whole world knows, translated The Pajama Game into Middle High Bactrian, contended in his paper that the Old Wendish rune “pt” derives from the Low Erse rune “mf” (pronounced “gr”). Well, sir, the discussion grew so heated that Dr. Twonkey finally asked Dr. Spleen if he would like to step into the gym nasium and put on the gloves. Dr. Spleen accepted the challenge promptly, but the contest was never held because there were no gloves in the gymnasium that Wild fit Dr. Twonkey. Pa vJ„ e £ eader is doubtless finding this hard to believe as Ul ? lvei l s f ty 13 celebrated the length and breadth of the land for the size of its glove collection. However, the reader f a f. k ® d ren J ember tbat Br - Twonkey has extraordinarily in*a small dS and , arr f- l n fact ’ he s P ent the last war working in a small arms plant, where he received two Navy “E” Awards and was widely hailed as a “manly little chap.”) 0/ P u IUP MORRIS > •pon.or. Of this column, urse yon wi&GZfZS,VZSXJt your copr ot MAX hvtj£S Holy Communion service at 7 a.m. tomorrow in the church sanctu* ary. Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service High Quality 2-Day Survica REED'S Laundry and Cleaners Established in 1912 109 S. Pugh St. Phone AD 8-8981 QnCanpSt&hn (Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek " tie.) PAGE FIVE ®Mu Bhulm»R. 19U
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers