PAGE TWO Parking Area Provideif For Homecoming Crowd With one of the largest crowds in the history of Penn State expected on campus this weekend, sufficient parking area has been made available for all cars, according to Walter Weigand, director of the physical plant. The partially completed parking lot, east of the TUB, near the fertility plots, will be available for parking this weekend. The Mitchell Farm property, north of the pasture field, will also be used to accommodate approxi mately 800 cars. Other temporary parking areas that will be available are the practice field near the golf course, the area west of the stu dent vegetable gardens, and a small area east of Hort Woods. In addition, all the regular park ing lots will be open. Capt. Philip Mark, of the cam pus patrol, has asked everyone to cooperate by “not parking in service drives, private drives, and main roads, where signs in dicate no parking. This is to 'fa cilitate emergencies and regular drivers.” Patrolmen will be located all over campus. There will be 35 in uniform and 15 in plain clothes. Many will be located in the park ing areas to help drivers in park ing. Mark asked drivers not to block another car if no patrol man is available when they are parking. Mark "said, “With full coopera tion of everyone, parking and traffic for the game tomorrow will run smoothly,” 14 Pledges Paint Children's Ward Fourteen members of Phi Sig ma. Delta painted the children’s ward of the Centre. County Hos pital and the Waddle rural school as a “hell week” project.' Two coats of paint were put on by the students who worked most of Wednesday night and finished about midnight last night. Irwin Gleb, Ronald Isenberg, Murray Horewitz, Ronald Lench, Donald Pripstein, and Sidney Ziff' painted the hospital ward. Arthur Cohen, Herman Golomb, Michael Kirshner, Allen Plotkin, Robert Kaufman, Robert Seigle, Murray Jacobson and Stewart Allen painted the one room school house. Dormitory Rooms Are Still Available Rooms are still available in Pollock Circle dorms for the fra ternity undergraduates who are being temporarily displaced by the large number of alumni re turning here for the homecoming festivities. Dorm 20, not Dorm 30 as re ported by the Daily Collegian yesterday, is the office in the Pollock area. Each fraternity will be allow ed a maximum of 15 reserva tions. Individual students desir ing Saturday night' accommo dations must contact the office at Dorm 20 before 12 noon today. A charge of two dollars a night per person must be paid in ad vance. Dr. Zelko to Speak Dr. Harold P. Zelko, associate professor of public speaking, will speak on “The Price Stabiliza tion Program—Problems of Or ganization and Employees Train ing in OPS” at a meeting of the Faculty Luncheon Club at the Hotel State College on Monday. There are ■ 161 schools for the deaf and dumb in the U.S. with an enrollment of 14,000 pupils. 20 for $(.00 P^pßf For Application and Friendship Photos Exact miniature reproductions (2%x 3%) from your portrait, any size, but not red proofs. Printed on silk finish double weight paper. Simply write your name and address clearly on back of your portrait. No further instructions are necessary. In clude remittance and 15c for postage and handling. Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back. MAIL TO-DAY CO. P. O. Box 1112 ALTOONA, PA. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Olympic fond Collects All women who are going to help with the Olympic Fund collection at tomorrow's foot ball game have been asked to meet' by the Beaver Field scoreboard at 1:1$ p.m. tomor row. ' Previous collection plans have been changed. Houts to Give Oil Paintirig To College An oil painting by Mrs. Lucy Kemmerer Lederer of State Col lege will be presented to the‘Col lege in a ceremony at 4:30 p.m. today in the lounge of Old Main by O. W-. Houts, also of the bor ough. President Milton S. Eisenhower will receive the painting, which will be added to the collection in Old Main. > The painting is one of several by Mrs. Lederer of the ore opera tions at Scotia, a booming iron mining center west of State Col lege prior to the turn of the cen tury. For the paintings, Mrs. Led erer conducted extensive research of the operations which enabled her tr • depict accurately the mules, dinky engines, shovels, and other equipment. In commenting on the painting,' Mrs. Lederer says that she wanted not so much to be literal but to “first of all make a nice painting.” Mrs. Lederer, wife of Col. Eugene W. Lederer of Manor Hills, is a graduate of the College and has done some graduate work here. During the summers she has studied under Emile Walters and Hobson Pittman at Pratt Insti tute, Art Student’s League in New York, and at the National Gallery in Washington, D. C. Her work has been done under such artists as Kenneth Hayes Miller, Reginald Marsh, Alexander Brook, and John Carrol. Widely known for her painting, Mrs. Lederer has exhibited in Corcoran Gallery, Washington; Virginia Museum; Richmond; Art Institute of Chicago; .the Cincin nati Museum; and in Philadelphia at the Art Alliance. She is listed in Who’s Who in the East and in Who’s Who in American Art. The average female trout lays over 10,000 eggs daily. lilllillllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllin ROAN'S Delicatessen = 400 E. College Ave. = 1111111111111111 l ■- great big ■ DOORSTEP 's ' get your tickets at Stadent Union FRIDAY $.90 SATURDAY $1,25 Ag Pavilion T ransformed For Show A complete transformation of the interior of the School of Agri culture pavilion is under way to prepare for the annual Horticul ture Show this Saturday and Sunday. Part of the landscape exhibit will be & 20-foot living evergreen tree, with a patio and pool sur rounded by ornamental plants, growing flowers, and a lawn. The tree will be seen as the visitor enters the pavilion. Soft music will carry out the theme, “Autumn Symphony”. Ex amples of .work by students in or namental horticulture, plant breeding, olericulture, landscape, floriculture, and pomology will be displayed. Floriculture students, headed by Flower Strang, will demon strate ways to arrange a dozen roses in vases and baskets. The ornamental group will dis play tuberous begonias and ger aniums which will flank both sides of the pavilion. Varieties of apples commercial ly grown in Pennsylvania com prise the pomology exhibit, fea turing a huge keystone of apples. Arthur Munson, who is in charge of the plant breeding -and oleri culture exhibit, will tell the en tire story of vegetable production from seed to harvest with sev eral kinds of vegetables. At the far end of the pavilion the refreshment stand will pro vide a modernistic motif, with its roof suspended from cables rath er than the usual supports. Francis Hoffman; show- man ager, and his assistant, Joe On dr ejko, are coordinating the work of various subdivisions. The Horticulture Show is open to the public all day Saturday and Sunday. MSC President To Attend Game Like Penn State’s Prexy, John Hannah, president of Michigan State College, will sit with his student body at tomorrow’s foot ball game. Two men from each of the sen ior men’s hat societies, Parmi Nous arid Skull and Bones, will escort President Hannah’s party from a luncheon with President Milton S. Eisenhower to seats in the Michigan State cheering sec tion. President Hannah is staying with his team while at State Col lege. Rev. Tucker to Speak The Rev. Howard E. Tucker, pastor of the Calvary Presby terian Church, Wilkinsburg, will speak at the meeting of- the Penn State Bible Fellowship at 7:30 tonight in 405 Old Main. Dr. Tucker’s topic will be “Doing What Comes Naturally.” Snack Bar Kistler Will Speak At, Chapel Sunday Chapel Speaker Sabbath Eve Services Sabbath Eve services will be conducted by Rabbi Benjamin Kahn at 8 tonight at Hillel Foun dation. He will continue his ser ies of lectures on “Basic Juda ism,” speaking tonight on the idea of God in its relation to re velation and miracles. "MUMS" M jpf the Word for Football As traditional to the foot '—r*- 9 ball season as the ref- J eree’s whistle is the / £ ever beautiful Chrysan themum, to adorn your. jfIHHL "date’s” beauty, or in iUIBMiL vases at home. Woodring's Floral Gardens Across from the Post Office SPECIAL RATES! for STUDENTS and FACULTY Subscribe to: Your Cost 1 Yr., ■& Mos. Per Copy TIME . 3.00 2.00 .058 c LIFE 4.00 3.00 .077 c FORTUNE 7.50 5.00 .625 c At METZGER'Sof Course! Dr. Raymon Kistler, president of Beaver .College, Jenkintown, will speak at Ghapei at 11a.m. Sunday 'on “Science and God’s Word.” i ~:.Dr. Kistler has. long been ac tive in church and civic work. In addition to his duties at Bea ver. College, he serves as presi dent. of the Pennsylvania Coun cil of Churches, Regional director of the Japanese Christian Uni versity, president of the. Chelten ham Township Civic Association, and director of the Abington ! ‘YMCA. He was on the 1950 Penn sylvania Week committee. Before coming to Beaver Col lege in 1940, Dr. Kistler was pastor of the Central Presbyter ian Church in Rochester, N.Y. , He has held pastorates at the Eleventh United Presbyterian Church, Pittsburgh, the. First !Presbyterian Church, Warren, and the First Presbyterian Church, Haddonfield, NJT. A graduate’ of Westminster College, New Wilmington, and the Pittsburgh Theological Sem inary, Dr. Kistler has been awarded honorary, degrees by Westminster and Beaver College. Dr. Kistler has traveled in Eu rope, Africa, and Palestine, and these, travels are the background for many of his lectures. Nepal is a small kingdom in the Himalayas between India and Tibet.