PAGE TWO - - Prexy To Head Parade On Armed Forces Day President Milton S. Eisenhower will serve as chief marshal for the Armed Forces Day parade to be held here at 2 p.m. Saturday. Community organizations with various ROTC units and Air Force men who are training to be clerk-typists at the College will participate in the parade. The parade will march west on College avenue from Shortlidge goad to Burrowes street. Formation of the parade will begin at 1 p.m. Tribute To Forces Col. Lucien E. Bolduc, profes sor of military science and tactics at the College and local chairman for Armed Forces Day, explained that this year's parade will be observed as "a tribute to the Armed Forces as an integral and independent part of the total ma terial and spiritual power of America now being mobilized, and as a renewal of faith in our country's sacred heritage, the Fideals of peace and freedom, to th e preservation of which our power is dedicated." Although Saturday will be the second Armed Forces Day to be observed throughout the coun try, this will be the first time it will be celebrated when Ameri can armed forces are engaged in combat. Air Exhibit The Air Force will exhibit a J-33 Jet Aircraft Engine in the Armory on Saturday afternoon. A series of Air Force and other films will also be shown for the public at regular intervals. The Department of Naval Sci ence has arranged an exhibit of various weapons to be shown in the Armory and Naval personnel will be on hand to explain the weapons to visitors. Weapons Exhibit Smile of the weapons to be in cluded in the exhibit are a three inch 50-cal. dual purpose gun; 40-mm. and 20-mm. anti-aircraft guns; an aircraft torpedo and a torpedo director; a moored mine; a five-inch, 38-cal. loading ma chine; 50-cal. aircraft machine gun; 20-mm. aircraft cannon; co incidence range finder; and an 81-mm. mortar launcher. The Air Force and Navy will also have planes flying overhead. In addition to the parade, State College will mark Armed Forces Day with exhibits of various kinds on campus, including de monstrations by the 112th Air craft Cont r o l and Warning Sauadron, and exhibits and dis plays in downtown windows. Case To Head La Vie Board Prof. A. W. Case has been re elected president of the La Vie board of directors. The other board officers for the 1951-1952 school year are vice president, James Worth, All-Col lege president; and secretary, Jeannine Bell, managing editor of the 1952 La Vie. The board members are Prof. A. W. Case, art adviser; Woodrow Bierly, editorial adviser; George Donovan, financial adviser; Ridge Riley, editorial assistant; Lou Bell, editorial assistant; Profes sor Franklin Banner, editorial as sistant; James Geffert, editor of the 1952 La Vie; Miss Bell; Worth, David Olmstead, senior class pres ident; and Marvin Krasnansky, editor of 'the Daily Collegian. Reported Erroneously It was erroneously reported in Tuesday's Collegian that George A. Weber, driver of the car in which Donald Maclntire wa s killed Sunday, resided at the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity house. He lives at 231 South Atherton street. SUMMER SESSIONS STUDENTS Room and Board at the Beaver House • 15 per week Call 7851 or See Us 329 E. Beaver Ave. lE=11•!::II Exhibits To Continue Combined Ads demonstra tions at the Temporary Union Building today are: 3:00 p.m. Pottery Demon stration. 4:30 p.m. Pantomime Dra mas "Mad Tea Party," and "At the Races." 7:30 p.m. Pottery Demon stration. Ha den bach Given Danforth Award Vivian Jane Hartenbach has been awarded the Danforth Fel lowship for the summer of 1951, Dr. Grace Henderson, dean of the School of Home Economics, has announced. The fellowship is awarded by the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis, Mo. each year to an out standing junior in home econom ics and covers expenses for two weeks in St. Louis and a weeks' leadership training program at the American Youth 'Canal) on Lake Michigan. The fellowship also affords op portunity to study problems of manufacturing, commercial re search, distribution, advertising, and personnel. Council Will Send 400 To Europe More than 1400 students and teachers have been Assigned to student ships sailing to Europe this summer under the auspices of the Council on Student Travel. Among the organizations going are Boston University School of Education, the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, and the Scandinavian Traveling Seminar. Many will join in international work camps clearing rubble, building schools; churches, and nurseries. Some will be studying for college credits, while others will be traveling alone or with friends. Cultural and social conditions of European countries will •be studied, while many will live in homes in various European coun tries experimenting in interna tional living. The Council on Student Travel is composed on many student ed ucational travel organizations which have arranged for the trip. Corrections Made In Exam Schedule The College scheduling of fice has announced the follow ing corrections in final exam ination schedules: Econ 2 June 7 10:20 121-316 Sparks. For 421 June 4 1:20 111 PT. French 40 June 5 8 112 Osmond. Math 14 May 31 8 121 Sparks Math 421 June 1 8 214 Wil.' Poli Sci 4 June 5 3:30 110- 219 EE. Soc 32 June 2 10:20 217 Wil. Span 144 June 5 8 112 Os mond. An additional examination has been added to the sched ule; Phys Sci 7 June 4 or June 5 7-9 PM 117 Osmond. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA The orange tint that has en hanced the Lion shrine since its painting April 19 is finally being removed. A steam-jenny, shooting live steam, is being used on the statue to loosen and dissolve the paint that has penetrated the stone. Work began on "he Lion yester day by physical plant employes and wi:l be completed today, Dan iel Krumrine, who is in charge of the cleaning, said yesterday. "It looks pretty good," he re marked, adding that those' por tions treated with the steam have become clean. The shrine was painted about midnight April 19 by a gang that revealed its identity to Captain Philip Mark, of the campus pa trol. Mark would not release the names of those involved, but said they were not Penn State stu dents. Chem-Phys Council Discusses Booklet The Chemistry and Physics Student Council held an intro ductory meeting for, new council Members. Council discussed plans for the School of Chemistry and Physics booklet which will inform pros pective students of the school's advantages. Robert Sharetts, James Ramsay, axi d Gerald Loughran were appointed to ar range the booklet. A one-page issue of the Chem- Phys Newsletter will be pub lished especially to remind stu dents of the school to take their draft exemption examinations.. MERCURY HITS HIGH OF 86 The mercury hit the-86-degree mark at the College weather sta tion on Tuesday afternoon. This is the highest temperature re corded for the year. - 7 7 77 7- 7 " 1* • !< • • . . : . Z... . •••• • • • • • • , • 4kovor.'l ,l t;Ng‘•' , • MAP OF SPRING CARNIVAL booths on Osmond parking lot. The carnival will start at 1 p.m. today and continue until 11 tonight. Lion To Lose Its Ora,nge Tint < • , • :•••• • L • • • v4=>?#.' : "Throw A PIE AT A DELTA CHI!" WHO? FRED BEEDLE JEB STEWART JESSIE MILLER JACK ROBBINS JAMES DUNMIRE AL UHL 808 FLICK CARL PETERSON And Other Choke Victims All Day at The SPRING - CARNIVAL -- DON'T MISS THE COLOSSAL DELTA CHI . BOOTHS Under the Hats . Parmi Penn State Spirit This is the fifth in the series, "Under the Hats," about campus hat societies and their activities. This week's feature is devoted to Parmi Nous, senior men's hat society, whose tappees started wearing their black and white name cards yesterday. Formal invitiation of the eighteen seniors and thirty-nine juniors will be held a week from today and will be fol lowed with a joint banquet with Sktt ll and Bones Smarr Winner In Discussion Frances Smarr, a sophomore in home economics, won the wom en's intramural discussion con test last night in the final round. Miss Smarr received possession of the gold. intramural discussion cup for one year. Miss Smarr, who represented Atherton's Leonides group, sup ported the affirmative of the question _"ln the advent of an all-out war, should women be drafted?" Those competing against Miss Smarr in the finals were: Sonia. Goldstein, also representing Ath erton's Leonides group; Mary Lou Transue, of Alpha Gamma Delta; Sylvia Berkowitz, representing McAllister Halt and Virginia Laudano, of Alpha ,Chi Omega. Mail Address Notice West Dorm post office offi cials have announced that all mail to West Dorm residents must include the name of the building in the address. •Zr , V. o, '• ' , , ~ .-, • : v :-.,-77,771., ' '.* , ~,,.•„f-;•:•,,,',..:;` ';' ~,..; ”' .",r.q.,,, , I. '` '.• : ' .. <:, ' .-' 4.' 4 ''.. .; • i '' ' ' r aja ..., i .!::: k''4ls';l • ' , , 4'2:4:;t ft,^lgl, - ..„,.,,,,,,.,..,,,..„:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;:.: ~,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,.:,„,, , „, , 5,, , ..,, -, , i ~,,...„. ~,.....,......,,, ~,,,,, , s:, , -, Afg: F#4,V4t. ;i:;; fctft .44; so). ip;i4A!":? , .oi!ggßiO:g•ii;ilNll' . 'ifiiiii.' ':,; : giiiiiin'o4:, , ;p,!..,i ...............................:,.,.,,.,,.„....:„:.,:—.:.:,......,,..,..................,..,....._.:................ MINN Nous Helps By JOHN PAKKANEN WHEN? 2:00 P. M. 3:00 P. M. 6:00 P. M. 7:00 P. M. 8:00 P. M. 9:00 P. M. 9:30 P. M. 10:00 P. M. THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1951 Parmi Nous, which is French fo r "among ourselves," is the oldest upperclass hat society on campus. It was founded in 1908 by Thomas W. Piollet, a civil engi neering transfer student from Cornell, with the purpose of hon oring prominent upperclassmen and developing Penn State spirit. It has remained a local organiza tion. B. M. Hermann, professor of American history, was one of the founders of the organization. Athletes Predominate Through the years the members of the society were predomi nantly athletes. A new constitu tion was adopted by the group last year to enlarge the field of activities from which tappees are selected. Fifty-one per cent are still chosen from athletics and the rest are divided among the fields of dramatics, forensics, pub lications, s tu d en t government, and politics. Prospective tappees are suggested by present mem bers or accepted from letters of application: Group Symbol The symbol of the group is shaped like a Greek Pi, but with the tw o vertical lines curving and meeting at the center of a horizontal bar. The meaning of the symbol and the initiation rit uals are secret. The activities of the members include ushering at official Col lege ffinctions such as President Eisenhower's reception last year, upholding customs, ushering at the freshman football 'stands, helping ,plan an di operate the flash cards used during football games, and, along with the other hat societies, form the• honor line on the football field before game time. Activities Parmi Nous members also worked with the cheerleaders last autumn to plan the pep ral lies and helped make the banner which is strung across the mall to publicize the rallies. The officers, as in nearly all the other hat societies, are selected by the' outgoing members. This (continued on page eight) SUSAN HAYWARD DAN DAILEY "I CAN GET IT FOR YOU WHOLESALE" gat air BETTE DAVIS BARRY SULLIVAN "PAYMENT ON DEMAND" LANA TURNER RAY BULLARD "A LIFE OF HER OWN"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers