'' . l"A`E TWO CARNIVAL SCENES—Mary Bambrick (left), Delta Delta 'Delta, shivers after being dumped into a bathtub full of cold water. in the "Dunk a Delt or a theta Chi" booth of the carnival. Joyce Gardiner, cringes as an unidentified sharpshooter, squirts her with water from a squirt gun at the "Hoop-O" booth sponsored by AIM Will Honor Independent Men Awards to outstanding independent men will be presented at the second annual Association of Independent Men banquet in the Eutaw House at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Awards for scholarship, athletics, and general activities will be presented in each dorm area and on an All-College basis. Pi Omega Pi Local Chapter Holds Initiation Fourteen students and two fa culty members were initiated as charter members of the Gamma Zeta chapter of Pi Omega Pi, business education honorary, at its recent installation. Mina M. Johnson, national organizer from Ball State Teach ers College, Muncie, Indiana, offi cially installed the College chap ter. Dr. Dorothy Veon, associate professor of business education, and Margaret Swartz, instructor of economics, were initiated as honorary faculty members. Undergraduate charter mem bers of the organization are John Barrons, Melvin Bock, Blaine Crooks, George Demshock, Ina Epstein, William Faurot, Joyce Flora, Harold O'Hazzo, Ruth Schenley, Evelyn Stuban, Malvin Wance, Barbara Waska, Patricia Weaver, and Barbara Wink. Officers elected for next year are Barrons, president; Bock, vice-president; Miss Stuban, sec retary-treasurer; and Miss Ep stein, historian. Mary Stella, instructor of busi ness education, is sponsor of the group. Student On Probation For Breaking Alarm A student was placed on pro bation Wednesday night by Tri-. burial for breaking the glass on a fire alarm. If he is brought be 7 fore Tribunal again for any disci plinary action, a recommendation of explusion will be given' to the Dean of Men. Another student received a sus pended fine of $1 for driving on Pollock road during class hours. Insurance Clubs Elects Gray New President David Gray was elected presi dent for the coming year at the meeting of the Penn State Insur ance Club Wednesday night. Other officers elected were Ed win Herring, vice-president; and Anthony Eagle, secretary-treas weer. LECTURE CANCELED ' The senior engineering lecture ,scheduled for 4 p.m. today in Schwab Auditorium has ben can t celed. _ The Carnival Goes On Despite The DOVVllipours I- Bill Jeffrey, soccer coach, will be the principal speaker. Stanley Zimmerman, secretary of the West Dorm Council, will be toast master. All-College awards will be pre sented to Anthony Stemberger, scholarship; Theodore Panopios, athletics; and Robert Davis, gen eral activities. Award winners in the Nittany area ar e James Haughwout, scholarship; Zolti Crban, athlet ics; and William Cole, general activities. Pollock area awards will go to Terence Caffrey,.scholarship; Jo seph Durniak, athletics; and Wil liam Raymond, general activi ties. Winners of the Town awards are Frank Szymborski, scholar ship; Frank Moore, athletics; and Emerson Jones, general activi ties. West Dorm Award winners in the West Dorm area are Donald Bebo, scholarship; Edward Merek, ath letics; and William Zakor, gen eral activities. Members of the awards corn mittee are Frederick Phillips, Richard Schoenberger, and Paul Zanoni. Today is the last day banquet tickets may be purchased, Nor man Duffy, banquet chairman, said. They may be purchased at the Student Unions in Old Main at $2.75 each. Holtzinger Elected National Historian Dr. A. H. Holtzinger, associate professor of chemistry and di rector of the chemical labora tories has been elected national historian of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical society. It will be Dr. Holtzinger's duty to assemble and maintain all rec ords regarding the origin and de velopment of the society. Dr. Holtzinger has been coun sellor of the Penn State chapter for many years and has been an active member of national com mittees of the society. Graduate Co-Authors Geological Survey Robert A. Navias, a graduate student in geology, is co-author of a geological survey which was published in a recent issue of the American Journal of Science. The article is titled "TheNoc cur r en c e of Chrysoberyl at Greenfield, N.Y." and deals with the rediscovery of the rare min eral near Saratoga Springs, N.Y. - , THE DAY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Dorm Group Votes Down Tenure Plan The tenure of office proposition allowing Pollock area council of ficers to hold office for a full year rather than one semester was defeated for the second time in the past few weeks at Wed nesday night's Pollock Council meeting. , William Waters, council secre tary, stated that the proposal was defeated by a 5-4 margin, and since the other night's meeting was the last for this semester, the proposal would have to remain a dead issue until' next year. President Leonard Tomazin an nounced that the council had voted to donate its whole treas ury balance up until July 31 to the Displaced Person's Loan. Russell E. Clark, director of housing, informed the ,council that there was a good possibility of installing a water fountain on the tennis court grounds in the not too near future. Clark paid a visit to the area in order to demonstrate the use of the new washers which have recently been installed. George Donovan, head of stu dent activities, notified the coun cil that its recent plea for the installation of a stamp machine in the PUB couldn't be fulfilled because of various circumstances beyond - his control. Group To Talk On Gifted chile A workshop to discuss the teaching of gifted children will be. held at the College 'this Sat urday. Margaret A. Neuber, associate professor of special education, who is planning the program, said the sessions will open with reg istration at 8:30 a.m. followed by discussions by leaders in this field. Dr. John Cartwright, superin tendent of the Allentown public schools, the first schools in Penn sylvania to recognize the impor tance of special education, will Preside at the luncheon to be held at 12:30 p.m. at the Hotel State College. From 2:15 to 4:30 p.m. work groups will meet in Willard Hall. At the morning session in 10 Sparks building s p e a k e rs will include Dr. Hedwig 0. Pregler, principal of Colfax School, Pitts burgh, and Dr. Arthur I. Oliver, assistant professor of education at the University of Pennsylvania, who have also done extensive work in special education. Mrs. W. N. Harley, of the Pennsyl vania Congress of Parents and Teachers, Inc., also will be a leader at the morning session. • —Photo by Hankin Leonides and the Barons. The carnival lot. was almost deserted during the height of the early afternoon rainstorm. Two figures can be seen daiting for cover. The crowd returned when the sun came, out, as shiErwn at the far right. Inkling Staff Works To Meet Deadline All staffs concerned with the Publication of Inkling worked un til•midnight Wednesday in an all-out effort to have the magazine on sale for Carnival day. Author's, editors, and eireulat . vertising staffs worked late into Eisenhower To Speak At Banquet President Milton S. Eisenhower will be principal speaker at the Agricultural Engineering ban quet at 6 tonight at the State College Presbyterian Church. • The banquet sponsored by the Farm Equipment Manufac turers Association of Pennsyl vania in. cooperation with the De partment of Agricultural Engin eering. A feature of the evening_ will be the distribution of the first printed directory of the. alumni of the agricultural engineering department. The directory was published by the Pennsylvania Farm Equipment' Dealers Asso ciation to rep],ace annual mimeo graphed copies. Several prominent guests, in cluding representatives of• na tional equipment manufacturing firms, will attend. Officers bf the Pennsylvania association are Ed Fisher of A.B. Farquar Co., presi dent; Charles Webster of Allis Chalmers, vice president; George Kentzer of the Oliver Corp., sec retary; and H. H. Fidler of John Deere, treasurer. I William Bower, president of the student branch of the Ameri can Society 9f Agricultural En gineers, will speak briefly on the many student activities of the department. Prof. R. U. Blasin game, head of the department, will act as toastmaster. Preceding the n banquet, the manufacturers will spend the afternoon on a tour of the shops and laboratories of the ,depart ment, and of new buildings and facilities on the campus. 'Reserved' Air To Pollock Road Capt. Philip A. Mark; head of the Campus Patrol, yester day came up with a new name for Pollock road. "With all those 'reserved' signs on Pollock road," Capt. Mark said, "we should call it `Burma Shave road'." The suggestion has been passed along .to the physical plant department. By NANCY LEUTZEL on, promotion, business, arid ad the night binding, stapling, and trimming the issues. . Sales were hampered by sud den showers yesterday afternoon which forced the circulation staff to set up its stands in the buildings for the duration of the rain.: However, Marc Kimelman, circulation manager, said 'that he expects a sell-out by tonight. Due to the hurried publication, the ink on the covers did not dry sufficiently, and yesterday's high humidity caused the ink to' smear, Florenz Fenton, managing editor, said. Student and faculty reaction to the new literary magazine is very favorable. Most students were a little surprised at its quality, and many expressed the opinion that it was much better thqn they had expected. The majority com mented on the good-looking ad vertisements in the issue. Compares Favorably R. S. Herre, Dean of Day Men . at Bloomsburg State Teacher's College and a former graduate of the College, said tha t. Inkling compares favorably , with the lit erary magazine produced at his school. He considered the main feature to be its pocket .size. R. P. Schlabach, Jr., assistant Drofessor of journalism, thought the format was interesting and that the people who producV it should be given support and en couragement. Expressions of optimism such s "It's about time we had some thing like this on campus" and "Hope it goes over" were over heard at the circulation stands. There were also a few typical Penn State comments like "Are there any pictures?" Players Announce New Year's Plays Penn State Players have an nounced productions to be pre sented at Schwab Auditorium and Center Stage during 1951-52.; The four plays to be presented in Schwab Auditorium are "Our Town" by Thorton Wilder, "She Stoops to Conquer" by Oliver Goldsmith, "You Can't Take It With You" by Kaufman and Hart. and "The Heiress" by Ruth and Augustus Goetz. To be presented at Center Stage, located at the corner of Hamilton avenue and South Allen street, are "Great Big Door Step" by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett, "Tartuffe" by Moliere, "Hedda Gabbler" by Hendrick Ibsen, and "Biography" by S. N. Behrman. FRIDAY -MAY 18 ; 1951 Ink Smears