The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 17, 1954, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
Rec Hall—
(Continued from page one)
Price of tickets ranged from 50
cents to $l.BO.
Czekaj and Harold R. Gilbert,
assistant director of athletics, said
they could not release figures con
cerning the cash receipts. Czekaj
said he was unable to comment
on the seating plan at the preesnt.
The Recreation Hall seating plan
was adopted last spring by All-
University Cabinet to permit fac
ulty members, townspeople, and
alumni to attend intercollegiate
sports events. The plan permitted
these groups to attend these events
for the first time since 1947 when
student enrollment at the Univer
sity resulted in a plan that per
mitted only students with Ath
letic Association books to attend.
No Capacity Crowds
One of the main reasons for the
adoption of a new seating plan
was the fact that during the 1952-
53 sports season Recreation Hall
was not once filled to capacity.
Under the new plan students
had to bring AA books to either
• the ticket window of the Athletic
Association office in Old Main or
•to the ticket booth in Recreation
Hall. Excharg~ tickets were dis
tributed at the Athletic Associa
tion office three days prior to the
scheduled event and at Recreation
Hall before game time.
Students were requested to get
exchange tickets at the Athletic
Association office rather than at
Recreation Hall. The reason for
this was that the number of tick
ets to be placed on sale depended
upon the amount of exchange tick
ets that were picked up in the
three days before the event.
Five tickets were sold at the
Athletic Association office for the
National Collegiate Athletic Asso
ciation basketball playoffs Friday
and Saturday at Kansas City, Mo.
The tickets, which were priced at
$B, went off sale at 5 p.m. last
night.
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE
TUXEDO—single breasted, size 36. with
new 14* shirt. Both 626. Room 301. Hort,
ext. 674 Shissler.
22 CALIBER Marlin lever action rifle,
model 39-A. Twenty shot capacity. Ex
cellent condition. Call Gary 4444.
BASS FIDDLE. good condition; including
metal stand, cases, bow; terms eau be
arranged. Call 3933 after 7 P.m
TUXEDO FOR Sale. Size 35. Good eon
ditian. Call 8-6814. Ask for Phil.
'47 BLACK 4-door Dodge,, '4B title, im
maculate throughout, mechanically A-1.
See to arlpreCiate. Call Wil, 7683.
Pio Zhi OM V"AI 1,13100 vinmf.:lMti,
buck tables and four benches. A three
compartment double drain stainless steel
sink. This sink will fit ideally in any plans
for kitchen remodeling. For more informa
tion phone 8-6831.
'52 MERCURY Monterey—radio and heater,
overdrive, whitewal tires, etc. Top con
dition. Call W. H. Snell 3250.
DOUBLE-BREASTED tuxedo, size 39, ex
cellent condition. Call 8-8714 atter 5 •.m
LOST
LADY'S RED wallet, containing driver's
license, important papers, on College
Avenue Saturday. Call Joanne Hornak
8-6436.
NEED CASH? Locate gray checked Harris
Tweed topcoat taken from outside 316
Willard. March 12. Call 2069. Reward.
WANTED
2 TICKETS to see "The Duke" (not Queen
Elizabeth's husband) Ellington that is!
Call ext. 2268.
STUDENT WANTED to share apartment.
Call 8-8953, about 6 p.m, or lunch time.
Ask for Chet.
FOR RENT
'must weiawomai4;fet.m.
Dished room for rent ,two graduate stu
dents preferred. Call 8-6772 during office
hours.
ROOM 8c BOARD
BOARD OR board and room available at
Marilyn Hall, 317 East Beaver Aye. Ask
for Mrs. Elleard
WORK WANTED
IS TOUR typewriter giving you trouble?
If so you can have it repaired. Just dial
2492 for pick-up or bring to 633 W. Col
lege Ave
RIDE WANTED
RIDE WANTED to Phila. Friday March 19
after 11 a.m., return Sunday. Call Chin
3933.
a d u k
RIDERS WANTED to Indiana. Pa. Leave
every Friday afternoon. Fred St. Clair,
phone 4177.
SERVICES
EXPERT TYPlNG—theses, term papers,
reports. Call Mrs. Pollack 2551.
MISCELLANEOUS
NEED A band? Call Arnold Barnett 7732
or stop in at Sigma Alpha Mu.
FRUIT PUNCH. Cookies. Phone 4818
State College. Frida Stern, 122 East
Irvin avenue.
RADIO AND rV guaranteed service,
prompt and efficient. State Colime TV.
=a h. Aignertes. none 34024.
'Miss
Engineer'
'To Be CroWned
Tonight at Mixer
Miss Penn State Engineer of
the Year will be crowned at the
student-faculty mixer sponsored
by the Engineering Student Coun
cil from 7 to. 10 tonight in the
Temporary Union Building.
The queen will be chosen from
the five Penn State Engineer
Girls of the Month, Joan. Gaddy,
Holly Hildebrand, Bernice Maier,
Lorraine Chaban, an d Gillian
Hamer. She will be crowned by
last year's queen, Shirley Mix.
The mixer will honor the new
Miss Penn State Engineer of the
Year and St. Patrick, who was
supposed to have been the first
engineer.
Harold Fisher and John O'Hara
will be masters of ceremonies.
Skits will be presented by faculty
and students. Refreshments will
be served.
Keaton to Open
PSCA Series
Kelly Yeaton, associate profes
sor of dramatics, will open the
Penn State Christian Association
series, "Religion and the Arts" at
7 tonight in 304 Old Main.
Yeaton, who directed the Play
ers' production of "Death of a
Salesman," will speak on the per
sonal significance of the Arthur
Miller play. .
ITS ALL A MATTER
ccaetie &Wads, stall always see
If" packs o f red an to d white-
how
Strikes they.choose
Those
- • t!
C 041114, THE AIIithICAPITOMACCO ceasrArre.
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Players to Hold
Five Workshops
Players will open a series- of
workshops organized to find and
train students for work on show
crews at 7 tonight in Schwab
Auditorium.
Any student interested in var
ious branches of theatrical pro
•duction may attend, according to
Nancy May, Players president.
'The workshops have been held
by the group every semester for
the past three years.
Three workshops will meet in
the basement of Schwab: makeup
workshop, managed by Clifton
Crosbie; lights workshop under
Si Morrill; and costumes work
shop under Carolyn Baer. The ad
vertising workshop under Joan
Clarey, will meet in the loft.
Tomorrow night properties
workshop under Joanna Binkley
will meet at 7 p.m. in the base
ment of Schwab.
State Party Appoints
Three Clique Officers
Tbree State Party class clique
officers have been appointed by
John Fink, clique chairman.
Sally Lessig, sixth semester ed
ucation major, was named senior
class clique secretary; Rosalie
Maiorana, sixth semester arts and
letters major, was appointed sen
ior class clique treasurer; an d
Stuart Horn, fourth semester
chemical engineering major, was
named junior class clique treas
urer.
it takeg three yaws steadg *ark
earti a o ne
It onigi takes one pack to WWII
That L.5./ffi.f.T.
ern Warren Perry
tiniversity
lrE BETTER :RESM I II:
SMOOTHER!
Rally-
(Continued from page one)
rally. "We didn't even know the
people back home were following
us," Sherry said. .And then prom
ised to fight again.
Other team members JameS
Brewer, Ronald Weidenhammer,
Robert Rohland and James Block
er—added assurances to those of
Sherry and Arnelle, that they
would do their best to "bring
home the bacon to dear old State."
Coach Elmer Gross also thanked
the students for their enthusiastic
support.
Members of Alpha Sigma Phi
have chartered a TWA Constella
tion to go to Kansas City. Students
can get tickets from the fraternity
until noon today. Cost for the
round trip is $74.
The flight will leave tomorrow
evening and leave Kansas City
sometime Sunday.
Twenty-five members of the
fraternity are planning to make
the trip. Approximately 15 other
students have already registered
for the trip.
Pollock Rood Tickets
Ticket number 52 was handed
out yesterday by the Campus Pa
trol in their week-old drive
against students driving on Pol
lock road during class hours.
Campus Patrol Capt. Philip A.
Mark said the number of viola
tions is slowly tapering off with
only eight recorded yesterday. He
added, however, that this does not
mean the end of strict enforce
ment of the rule.
~~ ._:
;.:' ~
WEDNESDAY. - MARCH 17. 1954
CPA Ad School'
Set for Tonight
An advertising school for adver
tising-- staff members of the Cen
tral Promotion Agency, Froth,
and other , publications will be
held at 7 tonight in 119 Carnegie.
Senior board members of sev
eral publications' advert ising
staffs and seniors in the advertis
ing curriculum will speak, accord
ing to. Ronald Safier, business
manager of CPA.
Organization of a CPA art and
design staff will take place at
8 p.m. tomorrow in 310 Main En
gineering. Hubert Ream, design
director, said freshmen, sopho
mores or juniors interested in
doing at.* and design work for
CPA may attend even if they
have not attended previous CPA
organizational . meetings.
Summer Positions
Open for Students
One hundred and seventy-five
camps and 25-resorts from 16 dif
ferent states have applied at Stu
dent Placement Service for stu
dents interested in summer jobs.
Jobs from general counseling
to administration work are being
off ere d. Further information
available at placement office. )
Petroleum Eng Society
The Petroleum Engineering So
ciety will elect officers at 7:30 to
night in 121 Mineral Industries.
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When you come right down tort, you
smoke for one simple reason . . . enjoy
ment. And smoking enjoyment is all a
matter of taste. Yes, taste is what counts
in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.
Two facts explain why Luckies taste
better. First, L.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike
means fine tobacco . . . light, mild, good
tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac
tually made better to taste better . . .
always round, firm, fully packed to draw
freely and smoke evenly.
So, for the enjoyment you get from
better taste, and only from better taste,
Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a pack or a
carton of better-tasting Luckies today.
COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIES
A comprehensive survey—based on
31,000 student interviews and super
vised by college professors—shows that
smokers in colleges from coast to coast
prefer Luckies to all other brands! The
No. 1 reason: Luckies' better taste!
We're rocking for ourfavorite. teem;
loud.
The argument re s a
moother-tasting Lucky Strike
But
Wins cheers from all the crowd.
Alice G. Ogden
Santa Barbara Cane&