PAGE TWO Costume Parade Route :^" THE SPRING WEEK Costume Parade (route crosse field where the All-College He-Man shown above) will form on Hamilton avenue contest will be held. The parade is scheduled between Garner and Keller streets as shown ' to start at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. by the dotted line and will proceed to the la- 6 Bands, 2000 Students Will March Five high school bands, the Spring Week string band, and abou 2000 colorfully costumed marchers will parade in Tuesday night's cos tume parade, David Bischoff, chairman of the parade committee, an nounced yesterday. Forty-nine men are entered in the All-College He-Man contest [owing the parade. All the groups that have en tere,.: booths in the Spring Carni val to be held Thursday will be entered in the parade. All groups are required to have units in the parade to be eligible for the Spring Week prizes. Other High School Bands Prize-winning costumed groups will receive points toward the Spring Week prizes. The best cos tumed group will earn.lso points, the best comic group, 100 points, the most talented group, 90 points, and the group with the most orig inal idea, 75 points. Judges will be stationed at the Pugh street gate on College avenue. No group will win more than one set of points. to be held on the lacrosse field fol Chem-Phys To Feature Shock Wave Shock wave demonstrations, es= sentially similar to those produced when a bomb explodes or an ob ject travels at supersonic, speed through the atmosphere, will be one of the exhibits to be featured at the Chemistry and Physics Open House from 1 to 8 p.m. to morrow in Osmond laboratory. Other displays to be shown will feature such fields as acoustics, colloids, and organic chemistry. The shock wave laboratory ex position is concerned with the study of high amplitude waves in air and other gases. The shock waves are produced in the shock tube by breaking a diaphragm to release a charge of compressed air. Pictures showing some of the observed phenomena which have no analogy in ordinary reflection of light and sound waves will be exhibited in 14 Osmond. The acoustics personnel will demonstrate the production of high intensity sound by a power ful siren located in 3 Osmond. When placed in the siren beam, small insects and animals are killed in a short time. Among the effects demonstrated will be the rapid ignition of cotton when exposed to the siren beam. In 306 Osmond, the colloid dis play will be shown. Such common substances as oils, metals, rubber, and water show strange and use ful properties when broken into small particles and suspended in liquid. At this exhibit, visitors will see demonstrated the process used in making rubber gloves, paints, face creams and similar products, as well as pictures and models showing the relative size and ap pearance of these micro-particles. "A Snake in the Grass Worth Two in the Pit" ANA COM Alpha Sigma Phi in Parade By BILL JOST In addition to the string band, high school bands from Centre Hall, Lewistown, Port Matilda, Spring Mills, and Tyrone will be in the parade. Parade groups will form on Hamilton avenue. The positions in which 'the groups are to form will be marked, Bischoff said. Shorten Marathon Race No motor' vehicles are being al lowed in the parade, bt& horses may be used. Bischoff said that the participat ing groups 'are going "all out" for this parade, and added that, if the weather cooperates, h e expects more than 2000 costumed men and women to participate in th e event. The marathon race scheduled to follow the parade route has been shortened, Jame Geffert, chairman of the Spring Week committee, announced. Under present plans, (Continued on page eight) The TAVERN MENU Friday, May 9 FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP LOBSTER TAIL • BREADED VEAL CUTLETS PRIME SIRLOIN STEAKS DINNER 5 - 7:30 p.m. Reservations after 6:30 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSTLV4NTA i'' . Y . ' ,,, ::: ' ' ' ' ' ' ,',',":, ',,,z'''- , :4g ' ;..'i °? • 1f * ,•`.11:44",':,1 it 4:::,,. ''..4.•,.3',=40,6•Aii.,04 '.;•••.'M\V.,Ol, n A,: , ;.,'•• '.•%'; -,:: ' ‘, I. ,‘ , .g \ ,>, : 1.',,,i..4"4>WRi04. ie • ~' ‘, ; ''','''' ' , :r: k": ';'V..krYVZ''..P',,,VIP 34. 0.-1,,,,-,41,,,,,,,,,, ~;.,.7,-,4,,,:.:.!,?,;,44,,,,,,„,,',..1', 'l ~ , , •,.. -' 5.,,,•-°: ...,',e,S,-*,,,,,,•5,1/4.iif,r„.„1:,:',,::,:,-1 ', .- ...„.:,, —„. ,"„ z,,,0,..., ,-,v:,; , ,,:N; -, - ", ,, I. .....,', tt.' t :,,y ~,'• , f si.-..-„,..0 ' . .•; ',„ : • ~.,i..z,... ; ., 1 , .. f,. , • , ' , "...,';,, z . , •.:. 'P' "4,', ';' , .-v ' ":'..N,,, c,..r: 4'":t . ',, ~,,r ;* •4,1' .e >3 . ‘;',. ',,i'.:;'-",::•,s',.‘i' ' , e , ''' k i,'-<.''..o:,' -2‘<tf <g,':•:.44'.,00., • . 4 ,, ,i, , . ,' ~,i0n.,...;;;,,'..- ;'.. "...-22:0„.•c.,,,A*,,,y' .. l • `..-4.4• , • ';',v,,,t..71,pfzj,4 :;,'..-.W, ::::,,,': ,"-„,....5".i.-,,,, ;,, 4,5,;:',:',./- ,., `..,,", ~ :', • '''•.;,,',,!. , • "...' , ::,q ,,,,, .. ,1, Va.P.,t'W:* *,,4e.4 ' •:'*'i!''''l'<.'l *lq4.-NWW•SR:4,.`tg':.lo.,',,,'-_,,,..,',.'e,t '-:...,,, „, .• ..$0400.4' .., ws ~/,, ,. .V.' I Phys Ed End s Nominations All nominations for the offices of the Physical Education Stu dent Council must be turned in today at Moffatt Cottage or to any of the present officers of the council. Council elections for all offices will be held Monday and Tues day. The nominations must include the name of the nominee and the position for which the person is nominated. The present officers of the council are William Mihal ich, president; Herman Sledzik, vice president; Margaret Lamas ter, secretary; and Nancy Rust, treasurer. Any student with a 1.0 all- College average or better may nominate himself or be nomin ated by someone in the school for the council posts. Only members of this year's junior class are eligible to run for the offices of president and treasurer. The offi c e s of vice president and secretary must be filled by candidates from the pres ent sophomore class. Bucknell Student Killed A Bucknell senior, Frank John Pilarek, 25, was electrocuted Wed nesday night while installing a neighbor's television antenna, the Associated Press reported yester day. • • . .. ' $45,000 Would Buy Press Equipment (This is the third in a series 9f articles providing backgrgunCl; on the five senior class gift suggestions for which mernbers.of She Class of 1952 began balloting Tuesday. This is the fifth year a senior class has been asked to set aside its gift to the College for the establishment of a student press. Three of the past four class gifts have gone for that purpose, With the classes of 1948, 1949, and 1950 giving all or part of their gifts for the press. As of this year, $22,475 has been set aside for the establish ment of a student press. According to a study completed by the student press committee of the Board of Publications, approx imately $45,000 would be needed in capital outlay for the estab lishment of an offset process stu dent press. Such a press would be able to handle all student publi cations, including the Daily Col legian, Froth, the Penn State En gineer, and the Penn State Farm er, according to Marvin Krasnan sky, former chair man of the Board of Publications and a mem ber_ of the student press commit tee. Held Cost Investigation Although this estimate of, the cost of a press is by no Means complete down to the last piece of machinery, Krasnansky said, it is accurate enough to give a pretty good idea of what a stu dent press will cost. This is the first time students have been pre sented with a concrete figure on the costs of a press, he said. "The committee has conducted an exhaustive investigation of the costs of establishing the pr e s s ," Krasnansky explained, "because we thought it would not be fair to the students if we again asked them for money withoht giving them some idea of the costs involved. We have made this . investigation, and we now feel Justified in once again asking the senior class for its support." In addition to this 'study of •the costs of establishing the press, the committee has also conducted a survey of the student publication work being done by Penn State organizations. According to this report, almost $60,000 is spent each year by student organiza tions for printing costs. The sur vey covers 20 campUs publica tions and. 49 fraternity groups, but does not include sororities, political parties, Thespians and Players, and other groups which do irregular and sporadic printing throughout the year. Press Would Pay for Self The committee is now in the I process of estimating as best it' can the approximate amount of money students can save by es tablishing a non- profit student press, Kr as n a nsk y said. That study will be completed shortly, he said, but there have been some estimates that up to 20 per cent of present costs could be saved. Using the $60,000 figure, he continued, students could save MAKE MOTHER HAPPY! Goss South Allen St. ........... ..... ..... ME Display To Feature Tour, Show Displays from Industries and - a tour of the new Mechanical En gineering Laboratory wings will be features of the 3ylE displays in the School of Engineering open house to be held from 1:30 to 8 p.m. tomorrow. The displays and the companies which are sponsoring them are a ball bearing bouncing unit, simi lar to the display in Franklin Museum, Philadelphia; a mis alignment tester, SKF Industries; a miniature section of a boiler, animated to show the flow of gas and water, Combustion Engineer ing Superheat Co.; a miniature model of a Smith-Kaplan - turbine, S. Morgan Smith, Co.; a regular room air conditioning unit, York Corp.; and an oomphmeter, West inghouse Corp. Several steam, internal combus tion and diesel engines, and an air compressor will .be demon strated in the laboratory. A display of drawings and vari ous laboratory reports will be shown in the exhibit. Drawings will be displayed from drawing 12, design 5 and 7, and repcirts fr om Mechanical Engineering laboratory 5,6, 7, and 8. Other displays have been sched uled for the Architecture, Indus trial Engineering, Electrical En gineering, Aeronautical 'Engineer ing, and Civil Engineering de partments. Chester Howells, a member of the student coordinating commit tee for the open house, said that a tour fOr guests has been routed, starting at Main Engineering, where a' copy of the Penn - State Engineer magazine Will be given to the visitors. up to $12,000 a year on their or ganizational printing bills. The press 'would pay for itself within a few years, Krasnahsky said, and as such would be the only one of the five class gift sug gestions which would serve both a useful and productive purp9 as well as affect'a saving for stu dents. . : . Big Or Mail Her A Beautiful Box of FACTORY FRESH Goss .Candy Candy Shop FRIDAY, MAY 9, 19 , 52
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers