PAGE TWO Spring Week Carnival Festivities Get Underwa GREAT FUN at the Pi Kappa Phi• booth "Tar and Feather a Pi Kap." Getting his dose of "tar and feathers" is Robert Berger, fourth semester electrical engineering major. The annual Spring Carnival will be held again tonight from S to 11 on the parking lot behind Sigma Nu and Sigma Chi. The weatherman has once again promised rain. 4 Student Maestros To Lead Kaye Band Sammy Kaye's musicians will take their downbeat from four students tomorrow night when the maestro brings "So You Want to Lead a Band" to the Senior Ball. Two men and two women,. whose, letters on "Why I like to dance to Sammy Kaye" were judged best, will direct the orchestra in one Nittany Fracas To Be Investigated The Dean of Men's office yes terday reported students owning cars that may have been involved Monday night in the disturbance in the Nittany-Pollock dormitory area are being contacted and ac tion will be taken tomorrow. According to Dean of Men Frank J. Simes, students will be asked, for explanations. If ex planations are unsatisfactory, stu dents will be subject to discipli nary action. License numbers of seven cars were received Monday night af ter a disturbance about the same time the water fight occurred in the West Dorm courtyard_ LA Instructors Get Rating by Students Liberal Arts instructors yester day began handing out the fac ulty evaluation sheets which were distributed under sponsorship of the Liberal Arts Student Council. Richard Kirschner, chairman of the committee which prepared the sheets, said 10,000 , forms were distributed to LA instructors who requested them. After sheets are filled out by students, they are returned - to in structors who are the only per sons to see them. TIM DAILY COLLEGWT. STATE COLLEGE.. PENNSYLVANIA number. Gifts from Schlow's, Jack Harper's, Kalin's, and Ethel Meserve's will be presented the four winners, and the best band leader will receive an autographed baton from Kaye.. Letters, no longer than 25 words, are still being accepted at the Student Union desk. The ball will be held tomorrow from 9 to 1 in Recreation Hall. Tickets are $4 a couple and. will go on sale at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the Student Union desk. They will also be sold at the door. Now in its ninth year, "So You Want to Lead a Band" has been presented in theaters, ballrooms, and hotels throughout the nation. Over 10,000 amateur conductors have tried their skill with the swing -and-sway baton. Each con testant's receiving an autographed baton has brought the cost of batons up to $5OOO, according to Kaye. Four contestants are usually chosen from the audience and interviewed by Kaye before they conduct the band. The musicians follow every baton movement of the amateur leaders, and winners are usually chosen. by audience applause. Kaye, William O'Mal ley, chairman of the dance, and Lucy Barr, publicity chairman, will choose tomorrow night's winner. • JOHN DEREK BARBARA RUSH "PRINCE OF PIRATES" in technicolor gat FREDRIC MARCH GLORIA GRAHAM "MAN .ON A TIGHTROPE" MARILYN MONROE JOSEPH COTTON "NIAGARA" SALLY LOU JONES, Thayer Potter, and Betty Richardion kick as Arthur Rosfeld (right) tries ,to . ensnare passersby at the Phi Delta Theta-Chi Omega booth at the Spring Carnival on the West lot behind Sigma Nu. Midways were packed 'on. the first night of the 2-day carnival. Everything went well for the - booths despite a short power failure about 10 p.m. 125 Trees Planted To Commemorate War Casualties One hundred twenty-five trees have been planted on campus this semester ,as a "living memorial" to 52 Mount Alto Forestry School graduates who died in World War I' and 11. The trees line both sides of Curtin road, starting at the Col lege rose-beds. Members of the Mount Alto-Penn State Forestry Alumni Society have c - Yatributed over $5OO for the stock. • Initiates of Xi Sigma Pi, na tional ' forestry honorary, and Physical Plant workers have planted the trees. The trees are planted in a de sign created by the Physical Plant staff. A small plaque will be placed at the beginning of the column of trees. Sketch Play at Tub A sketch production of the ar e p a adaptation of Koestler's "Darkness at Noon" will be given 'at 8:30 tonight in the TUB. The sketch is directed by William S. Coleman, graduate student in dra matics. CATHAUM BEGINS 1:30 FRIDAY ROTC Groups Will Parade On Saturday The combined• Reserve Officers Training Corps units will march in a parade at 1:30 p.m. Saturday as p art of the observance of Armed Forces Day. Besides the ROTC groups, Civil. Defense and community organizations will take part in the six-division parade. . A reviewing stand will be erect ed at College avenue and S. Allen street. The route of the parade, which will form at McElwain Hall, will be south along Short lidge road and west along Col lege avenue to Burrowes road where the units will disband. _Units in the line of march head ed by a police escort, the grand marshall, and his staff will :in elude: Division 1, Army ROTC Band and cadets; Division 2, Navy ROTC 'Band, officers, and midshipmen; Diyision 3, Air Force ROTC Band and one wing of dets; Division 4, Veterans of For eign Wars and Legion Groups; Division 5, Girl Scout and Boy Scout Groups; Division 6, Fire Company, Civil Defense Units, and High School Band Groups. % ..ii',...1',...t .. ' ...Z: .i...-.. 7.; '''''' 'k.illll,'t l'M THURSDAY MAY 14 1459 16 Grads Receive Ensign Rating From U.S: Navy Sixteen graduates an d eight former students of the College have recently received Ensign commissions in the U.S. Navy and four have completed preliminary training for their Navy wings. The men receiving Ensign com missions were graduated from the U.S. Naval Of fic e= Training School at Newport, R. 1., the Navy's only officer candidate school. Twelve of the 15 men were graduated from the College in 1952. They are Richard Malone, Richard Griffiths, William Leon ard, Jr., Charles Rightmire, Phil-' more Lurie. Wally Krieger, Robert Richard son, Jr., Lewis Hoover, Freeman Singer, Alfred Znaniecki, Pa u 1 Corazza and John WickS. The 1951 graduates of the Col lege are William Detweiler, Mar lin Brenner, Frank McKean and John La Clair. Also graduating were D avid Schmuckler, George Stevenson, Edwin Sweeten and Richard Wil liams who received regular En sign commissions. Graduates whO received reserve Ensign commis sions are Arthur Anderson, Paul Howe, Bronco Kosanovich, an d Joseph 'Selinka. William Cowen Jr. and David Walti have recently graduated from the U.S. Naval School; Pre-. Flight, Pensacola, Fla. Both men have entered advanced courses for their Navy wings. Frank Duke has completed carrier pilot quali fications on, board the small air craft carrier USS Monterey in the. Gulf of Mexico. Samuel Hamilton recently com pleted his first solo flight at the U.S. Naval Auxiliary Air Station at Whiting Field, Milton, Fla. Samuel B. Croyle, graduate of the College, and now a U.S. Navy ensign, was awarded his wings as a- Naval aviator. In the Army Herbert Arnold was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant while serving as public infOrnintion officer of the Iceland Defense Force. Second Lieutenant IDavid Scheffey is now stationed at Headquarters, Fourth Battalion, Medical -Field Service School at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. New "A me r i c an submarines travel faster under water than on the surface and can breathe under water. -PRICES ---- ADULTS - EVE. &Sat. Mat. $l, incl. tax ADULTS-Mat., except Sat. 76c, inc. tax CHILDREN -- AU Times 35c, incl. tax WARNER BROS. BRING You THE FIRST FEATURE PQODUCED NT A MAJOR STUDIO IN MURAL VISION 3D!
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