SATURDAY, MAY 24; i. 1.051 Religio Local ChOch .- -Qiro - Os To - Climai Adiiiities Picnics, senior banquets and a Communion service will climax the semester's activities of local student Christian foundations this weekend. United StudentTelloWoip and Roger Williams Fellowship will hold banquets in liOnOi''ottheir.senior members. TJ . F's dinner will be held at 5:30 p.M.'-iOniorrow'in - the baseinent of the Faith Re- Jobs -- (Continued frompagejour)' Graduate study may :he ',sub§ti tuted for two years of experience. Applications must be filed with the Executive Secretary, - Board of U.S. Civil Service. Examiners„ Bureau of Public• Roads; Depart ment of Commerce, Washington 25, D.C. Foreign Service Exams Civil engineering seniors •may file applications with'the Califor nia State Personnel Board for junior civil engineering positions available immediately on gradu ation. Complete information and examination application forin s may be obtained from the board, 1015 L Street, Sacramento. The Board of Examiners for the foreign service will give examin ations for 200 to 300 appointments to the service officers, Class 6, at Philadelphia, Sept. 8-11. Applica tions and additional information are available from the board, De partment of State, Washington 25, D.C. Applications must be re ceived before July 1. Fifty air travel scholarships, totaling approximately $3OOO, will be awarded next year to 25 col lege students attending Latin American universities by Braniff International Airways. To be eli gible, a student must meet schol astic qualifications set by the In stitute of International Education, and must be unable to provide for his transportation and a year of foreign study. Applications should be addressed to the institute, 1 E. 67th street, New York 21, attention Eleanor Middleditch. Institute Course Listed Five leading British universities are offering seniors, graduate stu dents, and teachers grants to cover part of the expenses for summer school courses in England this year. Free trans-Atlantic passages will be awarded to students show ing a genuine need of such aid. By arrangement with the College, the courses can be credit-earning. Applications should be made to the Institute of International Edu cation, • 2 W. 45th street, New York 19. Barnard College and the Na tional Broadcasting Co. will pre sent a summer institute of radio and television June 30 to Aug. 8 for college graduates; teachers, and non-degree holders with some professional experience. The,; in stitute offers four professional courses taught in the NBC studios by NBC department heads. " No academic credit will be giv en for the work. Applications for admission to the institute, the fee for which is $l4O, should be ad dressed to Barnard-NBC Summer Radio and Television Institute, 401 Barnard Hall, Barnard Col lege, New York 27. Morse to Speak A. 0. Morse, provost, - will speak at noon Monday before the Fac ulty Luncheon Club at the State College Hotel. His topic will be "The Penn State of the Future." The TAVERN--- MENU Saturday, May 24 FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP AND SCALLOPS ' 'LOBSTER TAILS STUFFED • PEPPERS DINNER 5 - 7:30 p.m,. Reservations after 6:30 By LA VONNE ALTHOUSE 41fOr-m6d Church, while RWr via h,told_ its banquet at Yp.in. tomor row in the basement of the Uni versity Baptist Church. RWF will alsohold a picnic, this afternoon at the Allen- Seega - : Methorial, near BOalshurg,,- Wesley Foundation an d the Lutheran Student Association have planned • picnics'and.outdoor 'worship "services for tor - narrow, LSAers will leave the Lutheran student center at 2 p.m. for Penn's Cave. Wesley members will meet at 4 p.m. in Hort Woods for recre, ation, supperi and worship. A Communion service closing the semester's activities will be held . at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Westininster Foundation. Evangelical United Brethren Student Fellowship will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow to plan the pro gram and to organize activities for next year. West Dorm Dance Jack Huber• and his orchestra will play for the final West Dorm dance, a semi-formal affair to be held from 9 to 12 tonight in the West Dorm main lounge. In Aztec days the capital of Mexico, Tenochtitlan, was a city of canals much like Venice. This Young Man . Knows -a BARGAIN! It's finals time again . . . which means you'll be need ing plenty of bluebooks. Which leads•up to why our young man is grinning so happily . . . he bought his bluebooks at MURPHY'S where the prices are so-o low! . Just cast a glance at this. 8 TO 12 c, 16 - TO 24 PAGE `for bou PAGE Qfor I®C .• • • . , SLEEVELESS BLOUSES: in plaids, stripes and solid colors. By the way, the Smart Shop is the headquarters for your' beloved Ship and Shofp blouses. $2.98 up SKIRTS: quilted, plain cotton and denim, in prints, stripes and solid colors. $3.98 up & n.g . AItY • COLLthi AN " STATE COLLEGE: : PEii\TN S YLV ANIA eeveless Blouses ! The best dressed girls on campus luy their cottons at the Smart Shop! theers, ginghams, broadcloths, linens, in styles and colors to suit any taste. $8.98 up NIVULPT zt-- SHOP 123 S. Allen St. Deft Queen Pictured is: 'NI at y Towson, who was recently chosen "Sweetheart of Della Tau Del ta." • co_edita Sigma Phe Alpha Sigma Phi Alpha held a ban quet in honor of its graduating seniors Thilisday night. Those who will graduate are Dean Davidson, A n d r e w Mills, Thaddeus Yarosh, Harold Kreiser, Charles Po4ock, Kenneth .Web ster, Edwin Montgomery, Fred Reinhold, Charles Brosius, Wil bur Kephart. and Lloyd Murray. Chi Omega Marjorie Lohse has been pre sented the Barbara Haller Award, given annually by Chi Omega to the outstanding senior woman majoring in social sciences. The award is presented in memory of Miss Haller, a former member of Chi Omega. Miss Lohse received the $25 award in recog nition of her work in sociology. Cottons ! Skirts ! James to Talk On 'Trouble' The Rev. Robert L. JaMes will peak ,on "In This World You Have Trouble" at the Chapel service at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. Rev. James is the regional sec retary of the Middle Atlantic re gion of the Student Christian Movement. Members of the. old and new cabinets and graduating seniors of the Penn State Christian Asso ciation are holding an all-day re treat with tha Rev. James and the - ReV. - Ltither H. Harshbarger be ginning at 10 a.m. today. The Chapel choir, under the direction of Mrs. Willa C. Taylor, will sing "Light of Light En lighten Me" (Ahel-Bach), "Open Thou Our Lips" (Rachmanioff), and "Row Lovely Is Thy Dwell ing, Place" (Brahms). George C eig a, organist, will play "Herzlich tut mich verlan gen" "Es ist ein Ros' entsprun gen," and "Fugue in A Minor", all by Brahms. Men and boys in Yemen, small kingdom at the southern tip of the Arabian peninsula, wear wide belts holding curved daggers. Alice and Don, Hairdresser's Phi Mu Phi Mu initiated eight wome last night. They are Jane .Biane Nancy Brandreth, Donna Carlso Julia Ibbotson, Barbara Newquis Ann Skapik, Marilyn White, an Rhea White. Thursday the sorority ente tained Triangle at a picnic . Whipple's Darn. Recently Phi M held a banquet in honor of I. seniors at the Eutaw House. ROOMS ONLY FOR Summer Session 4 per week • Phi Kappa Phone 3907 for Information SHORT CUT TO A SMART SUMMER Feel cool, look charming on the hotter days with one of our skillfully styled short hair-do's. Dial 2201 PACE