FRIDAY. MAY 6. 1955 Coeds to Participate May Day Ceremonies 73 In Seventy-three coeds will participate in the May Day ceremonies at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in front of Old Main. Faith Gallagher, eighth semester sociology major, will be crowned May Queen by Patricia Ellis, Women’s Student Government Association president. Nine former May Queens and 10 former WSGA presidents will head the processional. Sara Cushman, vice president of Womeh’s Recreation Association, will lead the ex-queens, and Margaret Forster, WSGA vice president, will lead the ex presidents .Nancy Scofield and Rosemary Short will be senior (attendants for Miss Gallagher. Cecelia Yar nall and Mary Ann Spanglers, are junior attendants; Sandra Stover and Anne Cain, sophomore At tendants; and Avis .Dunkelberger and Eleanore Woodward, fresh man attendants. Katherine Dick son is Freshman Maid of Honor. Mary McComb and Gretl Yea ger will be flower girls and Roddy Freed and Bobby Burcik Will act as trainbearers. They were chosen from children in the Nursery School. ’ McCowan Will Present World Mildred McCoWan, WRA presi dent, will present the queen with thg traditional world, and Mary Kerr, representing University Christian Association, will pre sent the scepter. ' Margaret Remley, second se- 1 mester arts and letters major, and Maria Turo, second semester psychology major, will be heralds. Jesters will be acted by Charlotte Klippel, sixth semester physical education major, and- Patricia Olkkonen, seventh semester rec reation education major. Thirty-six senior women will form the traditional hemlock chain, and 20 outstanding senior women will form the honor arch for the queen and her 'court. SchuhplalUers to Perform . The Schuhplattlers, a folk danc ing group, wjll present several dances. Other entertainment will be provided by members of Tail Kappa Epsilon and Kappa Alpha Theta, winners of the Interfrat ernity Council-Panhellenic Coun cil Sing. , ' •; Two maypoles will be wound by freshman and sophomore wo men. May Day is sponsored annually by WSGA.' Kay Kingsley, vice president of WSGA Senate, is gen eral chairman of the program. Jeanne Lindaman, 'assistant to the dean of women; is faculty adviser of the event. lUlUlllllllHilllillllllllllllllllillllllllrti Mother's Da^ Oft her special day send a Hallmark Card to show “you care enough to send the very best.” McLANAHAN’S luuuuuiiuiuiiiuiiiuuuiuiiiiiiiumi ‘THE’DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA -Approved Fifty fraternities have been ap proved by the dean of men’s of fice to have social functions to night and tomorrow night. r They are Acacia, Alpha Chi Rho, Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Epsilon PI, Alpha Gam ma Rho, Alpha Phi Delta, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Zeta, Bea ver House, Beta Sigma Rho, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Delta Chi, Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Theta Sigma, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Alpha Psl, Kappa Delta Rho. Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Epsilon Pi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa, Phi Kappa Pbl, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Mu Delta,' Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Kappa Alpha, Pi Kappa Phi, Sigma Alpha' Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi. Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Alpha, Sigma Phi Epsilon,. Sigma Pi, Tau Phi Delta, Theta Cni, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Kappa Phi, Theta Xi,, Triangle, and Zeta Beta Tau. Tau Kappa Epsilon and Delta Sigma Lambda are approved for tomorrow night only* 4 Religious Groups To Hold Activities Four religious groups will spon sor activities tonight. Lutheran Student Association will hold i wiener roast at Penn’s Cave. Cars will leave the student center at 7:30 tonight. Don Kaelin and His Nittany Valley Boys will provide the mu sic at the Wesley Foundation Square Dance at 8 tonight. A. James Barton, of the Stoney Brook School, Long Island, will address the Inter-Varsity Chris tian Fellowship at 7:30 tonight in 405 Old Main. Irving Bass of Phi Sigma Delta UNIVERSITY CREAMERY Club to Hold, 3-Day Conclave “The Student in a Revolution ary World’’ will be the theme of a three-day conference sponsored by the Cosmopolitan Club in cooper ation with the University Chris tian Association today, tomorrow and Sunday. Dr. L. Y. Tu, engineering re search associate, will speak to the group at 8 tonight at the Forestry Cabin on Mt. Tussey. A recreation period will be held from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow. At 4 p.m. tomorrow a student panel, composed of Jesse Arnelle outgo ing All-University president; Ben jamin Sinclair, president of the Board of Dramatics and Forensics; and Serge Scher, graduate student in liberal arts, will discuss how the University students can cope with the problems confronting the world. Cars will leave for the cabin from behind. Old Main at 7 to night, at noon and 3:30 p.m. to morrow. Indies to Sponsor Dance A square dance, sponsored by the Association of Independent Men and Leonides, will be held from 9 to midnight tomorrow on the Hetzel Union terrace; The dance is open and admis sion is free. will speak on “The Meaning of the Word Mother” at the Hillel Foundation Sabbath Eve services at 8 tonight. To Celebrate . . . MOTHER’S DAY ICE CREAM and CHEESE Centennial University With HEc A leader in the field of home economics education, the Univer sity was one of the first to incorporate home, management houses in the home economics program. It was in 1919 that the first building, Hillcrest House, wa» secured for the practical application of home management. Each month a group of eight women students and an adviser lived m t,he house. It was the students’ duty to plan the entire manage ment of the house, to divide the work among themselves, and to plan a budget which allowed 50 cents per day for each woman. In 1932. the second house, Bene dict, was opened for the women’s use and almost a decade later a third house, Beecher, was opened. In the fall of 1953 a fourth nouse, Schlow house, was rented to al low for expansion. This newest addition, located on College ave nue, is the only home manage ment house off campus. Plans have been made for four new units to be built on the point of. the campus near the nuclear reactor. Three buildings will be erected. Two will be ranch type houses and the third will be a two story house consisting of two separate units. According to plans, the buildings will be of frame construction with wood and brick i exterior and slate roofs. No date has been set for'construction, but . workmen have begun drilling for • foundation tests. The present program, as car- Get All Flavors to Take Home from the Joe Is Going in Service ... what can l give him for Graduation? If Joe is taking R.0.T.C., set of 2nd Lieutenant Ba: will be a much appreciate gift. Balfour’s offer you a coi plete line of quality mi; tary insignia, and it’s stock here in State Collegi Give a gift he’ll need ar enjoy receiving . . . MIL. TARY INSIGNIA from B: four’s. L G. BALFOUR CO. Office in the Athletic Store Pioneers Houses ried Out in Hillcrest, Benedict, Beecher, and Schlow houses, pro vides practical experience in all phases of home management. Women students who are seniors and juniors majoring in home economics set up a cooperative plan for the management of the house. Each student gets experi ence in marketing, cooking, clean ing, infant care, and purchasing household equipment and fur nishings. Each house is temporary home for a baby, usually under one yea/ old, who is cared for by the students in the house. There is a house adviser in each unit, whose capacity is that of professor, house mother, and frimd all in one. The present ad visers are Jeanne Riebel, Hill crest; Frances Henderson, Beech er; Muriel Starr, Benedict; and Janice Chennault, Schlow. Stupendous Savings at the “BOTTLE SHOP” Open Daily 1 to 12 PJt Entrance of Town House PAGE FIVE
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