The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 11, 1955, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
Riding Club
Announces
22 Winners
Twenty-two winners in six
classes of the Little Horse Show
have been announced by the,
Penn State Riding Club.
First place in the novice horse
manship class was won by Joan
Uhler, second place by Nancy
Horst, and third by Faith Hecht.
In the intermediate class, Yvonne
Tuduboise was first place win
ner; Margaret Bowers, second;
Elanor Milton, third; and Lois
Andrews, fourth.
Winners in the intermediate
jumping class were Elanor Mil
ton, Ann Bramble, Margaret Bow
ers, and Diane Barnhardt.
Gay Langhart placed first in
advanced horsemanship, Richard
Moore, second; David Klaer,
third; and Ann Bramble, fourth.
Bernard Gerbar was first place
winner in advanced jumping; Da
vid Klaer, second place; and
Barry Fein, third place.
Winners in bareback competi
tion were Elmer Milton, Yvonne
Tuduboise, Margaret Bowers, and
David Klaer.
Judges for the competition were
Gregory Gargarin, advisor of the
group, and Edwin Brodnax, sen
ior in wood utilization fr o m
Greencastel. Ringmaster was Her
bert Zakrison, sophomore in busi
ness administration from Esterly.
Joanne Bedenk, sophomore in
physical education from State
College, was show secretary and
manager.
Twenty club members com
peted in the six classes.
IFC-Panhel-Tea Dance
The first Interfraternity-Pan
hellenic Council tea-dance of the
semester will be held at 6:30 to
night at the Beta Theta Pi chap
ter house.
Interfraternity and Panhellenic
Council officers, fraternity presi
dents, and sorority presidents and
rushing chairmen will attend the
affair.
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE
DELUXE ROYAL portable typewriter
with magic margin. Excellent condition.
one owner. Phone AD 7-7147.
GUITAR, professional model, good con
dition, cheap. Call evenings after 5 p.m.,
Room 6, Pond Laboratory.
YELLOW NET evening gown. Size 16.
Worn only once. Grey flannel skirt,
size 15. Call 106 McElwain.
FOR RENT
THIRD FLOOR apartment—three rooms,
private bath, stove, refrigerator, utilities
furnished. Married couple only. Facing
campus. 310 E. College Ave. Call AD
7-7754.
MODERN 1053 Trailer. 3 rooms and bath
on Route 322 8 miles east of State Col
lege. Very private. $4O a month includes
utilities and automatic washing. No chil
dren. Call EMpire 4-1668.
LARGE DOUBLE room. Private entrance.
Private bath. Five minute walk from
campus. Call AD 7-7111.
WANTED
WANTED—THREE dates for Homecoming
Weekend. For personal interview call
ext. 1167 ask for Ken, Bill, or Bob.
WANTED TO buy—used flute
7-3873. Mrs. Vierck.
WORK WANTED
THEMES. MANUSCRIPTS and theses ac
curately typed. Reasonable rates. Phone
AD 7-7147.
EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires typ
ing of theses. etc. Fast, accurate service,
reasonable rates. Phone AD 8-6943.
_ _ _
LOST
COACHER RAINCOAT taken by mistake
early Saturday morning at Penn State
Diner. Call AD 8-9125. Name in coat.
PAIR OF men's brown tortoise shell
glasses near Library Wednesday night.
DARK HORN-RIMMED glasses. Tan vase.
Phone AD 7-4409 Phi Sigma Delta. Ask
for Dick Gladstone.
PAIR OF dark-rimmed glasses in vicinity
of Locust Lane and Acacia. Call Dave
Allen AD •7-3191. Reward.
_ _ _ -
MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING DONE. Theses, dissertations,
term papers. Mrs. Pierson AD 8-8375.
1015 Old Boalsburg Rd.. Apt. lO .
WILL TRADE three tickets for Navy
game for three tickets to Pitt game.
Section EE. Cull Terry Leach AD 7-4702.
DO NOT FORGET to order the delicious
decorated cookies, hors d'oeuvres and
cakes. Phone AD 7-4818.
PROMPT. PROFESSIONAL radio and
television service. Batteries for a❑ port
ables. State College TV. 122 N. Atherton
WHEN YOUR typewriter needs service
just dial AD 7-2492 or bring machine
to 633 W. College Ave.
PHOTO COPY Service. We copy every
thing but money. Everything for the
artist. Open evenings. Call AD 7-2304.
HASSINGER for racket stringing
the No-Awl way. Latest factory equip
ment, prompt service, guaranteed work.
Longer life to string ■nd racket. R. T.
Hassinger. White Hall or 014 Beaver Ave.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. - ETATE PENN MANIA
Parties-
(Continued from page two)
man appointed John Higgins as
parliamentarian; Jane Heath, as
sistant secretary; William Harri
son, men's campaign manager;
Margaret McCloskey, w omen's
campaign manager.
• Richard Zeller, fraternity cam
paign manager, with William
Smith, Richard Lacy, and Jerry
Oxman, as his assistants; Robert
Spadero, sorority coordinator.
Robert Steele,' fraternity pub
licity manager, with George Vla
chos, Gerry Alexander, James
Schru, and Curtis Smith, as his
assistants; James Malid, assist
ant veterans committee chairman;
and Joann Butler, assistant pub
licity manager.
Lee Labuskus, art manager;
Nancy Hankins and Sandra Gus
ki, Thompson Hall managers; Bar
bara Dietrich, Simmons Hall man
agers; and Ann McKnight, Wom
en's Building manager.
Warm Spell to Stay
Continued fair and warmer to
day with increasing temperatures
this afternoon is forecast by the
department of meteorology.
The high temperature predict
ed this afternoon is 79. Yester
day's high was 75 degrees.
.... add Spice to your life .. .
McLanahan's
and get a better shave! OLD SPICE PRE-ELECTRIC SHAVE
LOTION sets up your beard—tunes up your shaver. Stops dragging,
clogging and over-heating. The new, non-oily lubricant, "Isophyl",*,
prepares the skin for easy gliding ...lubricates the shaver cutting
edges for greatest efficiency.! 100 No feirmsderalmuktax
Soccer--
(Continued from page sive* )
fine panes to Packer. Thor *Stel.-
ynk, Steve . Flamporis, and Ralph
Brower were also demons on de
fense, pestering the Rams all af
ternoon.
Coach Ken Hosterman, still
nervous over the close win, said
West Chester has "a great club,"
and added that it was the tough
est win in over a year for the
Lions.
Ram , Coach Earl Waters re
turned the compliment by calling
the Lion team a fine ball club and
"one I'm not sorry to lose to."
FTA to Hold Picnic
Future Teachers of America
will hold a wiener roast in Hort
Woods at 5:30 p.m. Thursday.
Members planning to attend
should register in the office of
the dean of education in Burrowes
Building.
' A charge of 25 cents must be
paid by Thursday, Oct. 13.
CPA Candidates to Meet
The design staff and candidates
of Central Promotion Agency will
meet at 7 tonight in the CPA Of
fice in the Hetzel Union Building.
134 S. ALLEN STREET
SHULTON New York • Toronl&
41 101Stiketietaitt
hisurance Club to old
First Mooting of
The Penn 'Mate Insuralloie' Club
will hold its first meeting of the
year at 7 tonight at Sigma Alpha
Epsilon fraternity.
L. H. Morgan, manager of the
Central Pennsylvania Agency for
the Provident Life Insurance Co.
in York, will speak On "The Cano
pus Unit Program of the Provi
dent Life Insurance Co."
Students in th e College Of
MiNEN:iii:iiRMENti:::3OIMMENEff
9 Flights 0* ig
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NEW YORK • CLEVELAND 1
....:,
PITTSBURGH
Az
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Erie • Philadelphia • Washington
........
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Phone PHILIPSBURG 25, or Your TRAVEL AGENT
All flights depart from Black Mosharmon Airport
th
IL ,- \ 1• , Maker of "Barefoot Boy watt Cheek," etc)
ADVENTURES IN SOCIAL \ SCIENCE: NO. 1
"The proper study of mankind is man," said Geoffrey Chaucer
ip his immortal Casey at the Bat; and I couldn't agree more.
In these tangled times it is particularly proper to study man—
how he lives, how he functions, how he works. Accordingly, this
column, normally devoted to slapdash waggery, will from time
to time turn a serious , eye on the social sciences.
In making these occasional departures, I have the hearty ap
proval of the makers of Philip Morris Cigarettes, whose interest
is not only in promoting the pleasure of young Americans by
providing them with a gentle cigarette, matchlessly blended of
vintage tobaccos, grown with loving care and harvested with
tender mercy, then cured with compassionate patience and rolled
into firm, tasty cylinders and brought to you in king size or
regular, wrapped in fetching packages of lively crimson and
pristine white, at prices that wreak no havoc on the most
stringent of budgets; but who are equally concerned with
broadening the minds and extending the intellectual vistas of
every college man and every college woman.
1, for one, am not unmoved by this great-heartedness in the
makers of Philip Morris, and though I know it is considered
chic these days to disparage one's employer, I shall not. Indeed,
I shall cry "Huzzah!" for the makers of Philip Morris. I shall
cry "Huzzah!" and "Bon appetit!" and ."Stout Fellows!"
But I digress. For our first lesson in sobial science, let us turn
to the study of economics, often called the queen of the social
sciences. (Sociology is the king of the social sciences. Advertis
ing is the jack.) Economics breaks down into two broad general
classifications: 1) coins; 2) folding money. But before taking
up these technical aspects, let us survey briefly the history of
economics.
Economics was discovered by the Englishman, Adam Smith.
He published his theories in 1778, but everybody giggled so hard
that Smith, blushing hotly, gave up the whole thing and went
into the cough drop business with his brother.
For long years after that, economics lay neglected while the
world busied itself with other things, like the birth of Victor
Hugo, the last days of Pompeii, and the Bunny Hug.
Then one day while flying a kite during a thunderstorm, the
American - Henry George (also called Thorstein Veblen) dis
covered the law of diminishing returns, and then, boy, the fat
was in the fire! Before you could' say "knife," the Industrial
Revolution *was on! Mechanization and steam power resulted in
prodigies of production. For example, a Welsh artisan named
Dylan Sigafoos before the Industrial Revolution used to make
horseshoes by hand at the rate of four a day. After the Indus
trial Revolution, with the aid of a steam engine, Sigafoos was
able to make entire horses.
And so it went—factories rising from the plains, cities bur
geoning around the factories, transport and commerce keeping
pace—until today, thanks to economics, we have smog, depres
sions, and economics textbooks at $5.50. emu Shulman, 1955
The makers of Philip Morris, who brine you this column, are no
economists, but they do understand supply and demand. You de
mand gentle smoking pleasure; we supply the cigarette that has it-
Philip Morris, of earth!
Darkroom Opoo holing
,
i thit gdieteirephy *irks r me. la
the Rated Union- Dizilding base-
Mont is, new evadable for the use
of Omer" _Club members.
VY obtain .&key to the darkroom
' a Camera Club membership card
must be shown at the lietzel
Union desk.
Business Administration may at
tend the meeting. Refreshments
will be served.