WEDNESDAY. AP :IL 10. 1957 Femal AtM mage Conclave Dr. Jessie E mistic scene fc means more to privilege of asl However, ir privilege, she e . Bernard, professor of sociology, set an opti r marriages last night and said • “marriage a woman and she should therefore have the ing for dates and proposing.” en would be reluctant to relinquish this high dded at the fourth annual Marriage Confer ence. Dr. Bernard said that conditions for marriage are better today than ; they have ever been. Changes Abel. Relationship Pointing out that biological and sociological changes will'result in a “golden relationship” during the 15 years in which the married couple no longer have family re sponsibilities, Dr. Bernard advised young people to consider these years (between 45 and 63). This can be a potential time in which “they can create something and have a chance to develop their own interests,” she said. Biologically people are getting bigger and living longer because they are healthy, and _ they are maturing younger and retaining their youth longer, she said. “This has given marriages mo ie poten tial today,” Dr. Bernard added. I Q’s .Aid Marriages More stable marriages will re sult because I Q’s: are getting higher and people are better edu cated today, she said and “socio logical and psychological research is making education more func tional.” "Obligations, responsibilities and privileges of marriage today are not so clear,”- she said, for long-ago the Bible told wives just what to do. Today their role is not so clearly Outlined and the question of married women work ing has an uncertain answer, she said. It is the “young men who don’t want their wives to work,” Dr. Bernard said. Setting Justifies High Hopes “Today’s generation is justified in dreaming wonderful dreams with some assurance of realiza tion,” she said, because of the favorable auspicious setting for today’s marriages: Dr. William M. Smith, professor of family relationships, will speak on the dream .in marriages— “finding the right one”—at 7:30 tonight in the lounge of the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Me|morial Chapel. The conference is open to the public. Teams To Pic In Deb Fail ce ates The men s and teams failed to { annual tournamei ing Association [ Colleges, but twt won a first and ; individual compc women’s debate lace in the 10th nt of the Debat ed Pennsylvania squad members i second place in itition. Edward Klevai is, senior in elec trical from Roaring Springs, won the men’s oratory championship. 1 Llevans’ speech, • entitled “Confes;,” was on Com munist brainwashing. ■ -Vicki O’Donnell, sophomore in arts and letters from Irwin, tied for second place in the‘women’s oratory contest. Miss O’Donnell spoke on “Seeds of Destruction.” The women’?, teams brought home a split record, winning five ■ matches and losing five. The members of the affirmative .team were Bonnie Jones, soph omore in education, from Balti more, Md., and Susan Whittington, sophomore in arts and letters from Arlington, Va. The negative team members . were "Phoebe Felk, junior in arts and letters from Ambridge and • Miss' O’Donnell. The men’s squad was repre sented 'by Jonathan. Plaut, senior in industrial engineering from Rockville, and Kievans, who de fended the affirmative side, and Daniel Fegert, senior in arts and letters from Milwaukee, Wis., and Robert Adams, junior in business administration from Johnstown, The .teams debated the inter national debate topic: Resolved: That the United States should dis continue direct economic aid to foreign countries. Sociologist to Address Historical Club Meeting Dr. Roy. C. Buck, associate pro fessor of rural sociology, will ad dress a meeting of the Westmore land-Fayette Historical Society Friday night at the Trotter Public School near Connelsville. He will speak on “Broadening the Interest Base of the County Historical Society.” • The. London Times runs all clas sified advertisements on its front page. SIGMA PHI Barbershop Quartette 8:00 P.M. Schwab Auditorium Phi Kappa Sigma Tri Sigma Pi Beta Phi Pi Kappa Alpha _.. _ Alpha Tau Omega Chi Phi .......... Theta Phi Alpha Sigma Tau I Gamma Kappa Alpha * Theta Della Theta Sigma Acada 9 Guest Appearance of % Jack Kapitanoff's Collegians Proposals Urged Science Fiction Society The Science Fiction Society will meet at 7 tonight in 209 Het zel Union. Contributors to the group’s mag azine will bring material to the meeting. Resort Interviews The following resort will inter view at the Student Employment Service, 112 Old Main: Hulett's on Lake George, N.Y., April 13. ALPHA CONTEST APRIL 10, AH proceeds go to Muscular Dystrophy 1...... 4 Brothers Sigma's Three Plus One The Hi-Phi's Pleasant Pikes Tau House Four 1 Chakettes Tepa Toneties Penn Statesmen Thelattes Four Tones Alpha Chi Omega :OLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA THE DAILY Exhibit Shows # Hell # Postmark By PAULA MILLER Have you ever received a letter from Hell? . . . Hell, Norway, that is? Currently on display in the front lobby of the Pattee Li brary is a collection of stamps and envelopes from all over the world, even from Hell, Norway. The exhibit is being sponsored by the Mount Nittany Philatelic Society. In .the display there are selections from several stamp col lections of club members. Featured.in one of the cases is a coUection of stamps with over print errors. The collection is owned by Albert R. Erskine, in structor in mathematics and head of the exhibition. In explaining why the stamps: were overprinted, Erskine saidj that the stamps were given out in l occupied Germany following World War IL When the Allies decided to increase the value of the Mark they also had to indi cate on the stamps that they had an increased value. Also on display is a selection of recent stamps from Monaco. Is sued in 1956, the stamps include pictures of President Dwight D. Eisenhower worth 5 francs, a stamp worth 40 francs with Prince Ranier’s picture and a stamp worth 200 francs with a picture of Prince Ranier and wife Grace. Other stamps issued from Mon aco .have pictured on them old fashioned cars, zeppelins and rockets! Vatican Stamps Exhibited In another of the cases is ex hibited stamps from the Vatican City. One series in particular fea tures the “Michelangelo’s Dome of Eng Senior Orders Due For Caps and Gowns Today is the deadline for sen iors enrolled in the College of En gineering and Architecture to or der caps and gowns. From Thursday through Satur day seniors in the' College of Lib eral ’ Arts and' Business Adminis tration may. order their caps and gowns. Orders are being taken at the Athletic Store. Hillel Board to Meet Hillel Governing Board will meet at 7 tonight-at the Hillel Foundation. The nominations committee will meet, at 8 p.m. tomorrow to nomi nate officers for next week. The graduating seniors of the govern ing board may attend the meet ing. ■Somethina (or See Gifts for Miss Penn Stat< and He-Man April 12-15 Explains Overprints Here’s The Best Spring Disneyland of 1957 Start Now for the Big Events ... • Preliminaries of He-Man Contest April 28 • Coronation of Miss Penn State April 29 • Carnival April 30 • Mad-Hatters Parade May I • He-Man Finals May I • Tournament of the Queen of Hearts May 1 • All-Service Talent Show May 2 Trophies awarded at the Talent Show Saint Peter’s Basilica," honoring! he first Pope. Stamps issued in the United States can also be seen in the display. Some of these stamps vvere issued in honor of the Army. Navy, Red Cross, doctors’ centen nial, baseball’s centennial and the newsboys of America. A collection of stamps from Germany before the forming of the German Empire in 1872 is also featured in the display. At that time, each of the German free states and frea cities issued its own stamps. In the exhibition are stamps from Hamburg, Mechlen- s^ eek jburg-Schwerin and Saxony (1851). In another of the cases is a col lection of stamps on envelopes marked first day issued. One ex ample is a stamp honoring Book er T. Washington’s 100th year. Included in the display is a ser ies of ictters between a local resi dent and a Polish lawyer. The two men, who started correspond ing after World War 11, have been exchanging stamps of special in terest since then. Also in the exhibition is a col lection of stamps showing the history and progress of the United Nations. 'ishe bjear See Trophies in 'A' Store Window April 25 - May 2 Yet... PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers