PAGE TWO Five Finalists Selected for Military Ball Contest Queen to Reign Friday Rosemary Bass, Jane Hartzell, Marilyn Myers, Toni Lisinichia, and Patricia Maloney have been selected as the five finalists for the Military Ball Friday. , The queen will be crowned by Ray Anthony during intermission of the dance. The finalists were selected from 40 entrants by the cadet commander and his staff at the Pennsylvania Military College, Chester, Pa. The queen will be chosen at the ball by Col. Richard Reidy, professor of military sci ence and tactics; Col. Daniel Riva, professor of air science; and Capt. V. B. MacCrae, professor of naval science Cadet Col. Gordon G. Fee, mas ter of ceremonies, will present the queen to each member of the court a silver plated trophy and a bouquet of roses. Miss Bass is a student at the University and was sponsored by John Lyon, -Cadet Major of the Air Force Reserve Officers Train ing Corps. She is a sophomore in journalism from Camp Hill, and is a member of Kappa Delta. Miss Bass is also a member of Angel -Flight, AFROTC Auxiliary Organization. Miss Hartzell, sponsored by Ar thur Bates, Cadet Ist Lt. of the Army Reserve Officers Training Corps, is a junior in home eco nomics from Lancaster. She is a member of Kappa Delta and An gpi Miss Myers, senior in arts and letters from Scotia, N.Y., is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. She was sponsored by Reid Es challier, Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps. Miss Lisinichia is a freshman at East Stroudsburg State Teachers College, and is majoring in ele mentary education. Donald Tins man, AFROTC, sponsored her. Miss Maloney is a freshman in pre-medical at Duquesne Univer sity, and lives in Pittsburgh. She was sponsored by Donald Dobros ki, Cadet Sgt. Ist Class AROTC. Free Lecture Entitled "CHRISTIAN SCIENCE:,, The Power of an Active Faith by John D. Pickett, C.S. of Chicago, Illinois Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts Thursday, Dec. 8 8 p.m. MINERAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Veater Takes First In Pushcart Race (Picture on page 5) Goodnatured confusion reigned at Beaver Field Saturday as approximately 400 students cheered Donald Veater to vic tory in the first Town Independent Men pushcart race. Veater, freshman in ceramic technology from Uniontown —racing for Nittany 39—raced the 100-yard course in 22 seconds .to win the $25 and the foot high trophy. TIM collected about $l5O from 25 entrants m the race. After ex penses have been deducted the remaining amount will be given to Campus Chest. Robert Cole, TIM president, said the group was .attempting to help Campus Chest because they did not receive as much as ex pected in their first drive of the year. Spectators dashed from one side to the other, determined to see the start and the finish of each race. This, plus the fact that contestants had as much difficulty in keeping the carts on the course, caused a great deal of confusion as well as laughter and cheering. Good Variety of Colors The variety of colors displayed by the carts and the originality of the signs displayed by the con testants lent color and interest to Marilyn Myers the spectacle. Most signs gave the name of the group for which the contes tant was entered. The sign "me” stood out frpm others. Barbara Rilling, racing for Al pha Xi Delta, gave Veater a close race as she placed second in the finals. Miss Rilling won her first; heat in another close finish as she beat Bruce Lieske, racing for Association of Independent Men. Other Competitors Others competing in the finals were Richard Brown, Sigma Phi Alpha; Christopher Kuebler, Sig ma Alpha Epsilon; and Harold Gardner, Pollock 11. Kuebler, dashing over the fin ish line still smoking a cigarette, placed in a close match against John Wagner of Theta Delta Chi, advancing him to the finals. '"V/ . t h,.. Toni Lisiitfchla Georgia Tech— (Continued, from page one) respect the laws, customs and-tra ditions of the host state.” That -means that in states outside the South, Georgia teams can play op ponents having Negroes or before nonsegregated spectators, because laws and customs of those states do not require segregation. But the resolution adds, “No contract or agreement shall be entered into for an athletic con test in any state where the cir cumstances under which it is ful filled are repugnant to the laws, customs and traditions of the host Bloch later told newsmen the* Be sure... it's a KEPLER composite Located in Danks & Co. Beaver Ave. Entrance Welcome to Penn State's ICE SKATING RINK EAST OF NITTANY DORMITORIES ADMISSION PRICES SKATES, ALL SIZES, ARE AVAILABLE FOR RENTAL AT 25c PER PAIR PER SESSION SPECIAL EVENTS FACULTY NIGHT EVERY MONDAY KIDDIES EVERY SATURDAY MORNING 9 TO 11:30 A.M. (Grade School Age, 25c) TUESDAY. DECEMBER t. 1955 last section applies specifically to the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. No team of the university system, he said, could take part in a non segregated game there after Jan. 2, 1956. though! of SPUDNUTS! K DKTEBENT "VARIETIES Breakfast* Coffee Break Pfcon* 1 lw ikfrf CLIP AND SAVE DAILY HOURS 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 7p.m. to 10 p.m. UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, 25c (with matriculation card) NON-STUDENT SKATERS, 50c 7 TO 10 P.M. (Special Faculty price, 25c) CLIP AND SAVE Tibida
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