PAGE EIGHT Wokott Announces Nine IFC Workshop Meetings Nine Interfraternity Council workshops will be held Tues day through Thursday, Samuel Wolcott, workshop chairman, has announced. The workshops, a yearly IFC project, will be divided into discussion groups which will meet at the house of the dis cussion leader Tuesday night. Discussions will be held con cerning various fraternity prob lems, and suggestions for solu tions to these problems will be aired If the groups feel they need more time, talks will be carried over to Wednesday night. IFC workshop discussion leaders will meet at 7 p.m. Sun day in 217 Helsel Union Build ing. Tentative agendas for the discussion groups will be drawn up at the meeting. On Thursday, all people con nected with the workshops will attend a banquet at 6 p.m. in the Hetzel Union Building. Three members from each house will be allowed to attend the banquet. The speaker will be Horace Ni chol, national IFC vice-chairman. To Publish Booklet After the workshops are com pleted, a booklet will be pub lished containing suggestions which were proposed at the var ious group discussions. Roger Alexander, Delta Tau Delta, will edit the booklet. Each fraternity at the Univer sity will receive a copy of the booklet. Copies will also be sent to IFC organizations at other col leges and universities in the coun try. Leaden Listed Discussion leaders and the places where these groups will meet are Presidents: William Landis, Theta Chi: Rushing: Rich- CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE 1966 JAGUAR with overdrive, '66 Ramb ler Station Wagon, '55 Chev Pick-up truck, '63 Rambler Country Club with rdrive, '6l Chev. with power-glide, !;tutielmker convertible with automatic, ' Hillman Minx, '49 Nash 600 with .....lrive, '49 Buick, new tires, and '4O P.ymouth. Service specialist on all do mestic and foreign cars. Weiser Motor Co., one mile east of State College on road to Bellefonte. SHOTGUN--Ithaca Model 37 16 gauge modified choke. Remingtons Model 760 300 calibre and 35 calibre. All new. Slightly over wholesale price. Call John Viletto Nitt 33. 1948 CHRYSLER four door. Good con dition. Heater, good tires. Must sell. Phone AD 8-9178 or 129 South Frazier. t TAR, professional model, good con uition, cheap. Call evenings after 5 p.m., Room 6, Pond Laboratory. FOR RENT VACANCY FOR two students to share large room with two others. Apply 110 S. Barnard or call AD 8-8363. DESIRABLE ROOMS: clean, private and quiet. Close to campus. Inquire 519 W. College Ave after 5 p.m. - - DOUBLE ROOM—one mile from campus Breakfast optional. Call AD 8-8324. 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 1963 Trailer, 3 rooms and bath on Route 322 8 miles east of State Col lege. Very private. $4O a month includes utilities and rutomatic washing. No chil dren. ('all EMpire 4-1668. HELP WANTED STUDENTS WITH a couple of spare evenings that suit you. Earn up to $1.60 per hour. See "Perry" at Dux Club, 128 South Pugh. SHORT ORDER cook needed for weekend work Also full-time waitress. Call AD 8-9091, liennetts Sky Restaurant. WORK WANTED EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires typing of theses etc. Fast, accurate service. Reasonable rates. Phone AD S-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 Wednesdaynight. MISCELLANEOUS TYPING DONE. Theses, dissertations term papers. Mrs. Pierson AD 8-8375 1015 Old Boldslaarn Rd., Apt. 10 . PROMI'T, PROFESSIONAL radio and television service. Batteries for all port ables. State College TV. 122 N. Atherton WHEN YOUR typewriter needs service just dial AD 7-2492 or bring machine to 633 W. Cullen.° Ave. PHOTO COPY Service. We copy every thing but money. Everything for the •rtint. Open evenings. Call AD 7-2304. ]T'S HASSINGIOR for racket stringing the No-Awl way. Latest factory equip ment, prompt service, guaranteed work. Longer life to sl-ing and racket. R. T. )1m -singer White Hall or 6/4 Heaver Ave. After 6 pan. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Correction The neme of the group which applied to the University Sen ate for recognition as a frater nity is Pi Sigma Upsilon, not 'Phi Sigma Upsilon, as was er roneously reported In Tues day's Daily Collegian. Theta Sigma Phi to Meet Theta Sigma Phi, women's na tional professional journalism fraternity, will meet at 6:30 to night in Grange Playroom. and Seng, Phi Delta Theta; So cial: Richard Jamieson, Delta Up silon; Scholastic: Carl Nale, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Public Relations: Verge Volpe, Sigma Alpha Epsi lon; Treasurer: Hugh Cline, Phi Gamma Delta; Alumni Relations: Donald Woods, Lambda Chi Al pha; Pledge Masters: Richard . Coolbaugh, Chi Phi; House Mana gers: Frederic Montonari, Phi Kappa Sigma. All the pleasure comes thru vevalsami • • • "die ?Web • with a genuine cork tip. Tareyton's filter is pearl-gray because it e. --jogiiimago---te RED • smo FILTER TI PTA R EYTON PRODUCT OF CZ cingIIZEGOI , SZerAttel4Sff AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIOARITTES r==l=l Tiger Inspires Lion Fierce • mountain lions that roamed the hills of Centre Coun ty in the past were chosen to serve as the University's athletic symbol more than four decades ago. And another wild beast, the tiger, served as the inspiration for the Penn State selOction. While visiting Princeton Uni versity as a member of the Penn State freshman baseball team, H. D. "Joe" Mason, class of 1907, saw a statue of the Bengal Tiger. The fact that his own school had no emblem rankled with the young freshman and on his return to the campus he began a campaign to have the mountain lion adopt ed as the, University mascot. The campaign was carried on by Mason and his friends in "The Lemon," a campus publication de signed to direct "streams of as tringent juice at those things in and about the College that, in the eyes of the undergraduates, need betterment or abolishment." One issue exhorted: "Why not for State College, our College, the best in all the menagerie of college pets? Our College is the best of all—then why not select for ours, the King of Beasts, the Lion" "The Lemon" further pointed out: "Dignified, courageous, mag nificent, 'The Lion' allegorically represents all that our College Spirit should be. So why not 'The Nittany Mountain Lion'." •At that time no other schools used the Lion as a symbol and it All the pleasure comes thru in Filter Tip Tareyton. You get the full, rich taste of Tareyton's quality tobaccos in a filter ciga rette that smokes milder, smokes smoother, raws easier... and it's the only filter cigarette is believed that Penn State was the first to adopt it. Mountain lions figured in the traditions of the school. They roamed the barrens of C e n tr e County 30 years after the com pletion of Old Main, In 1800 eight were killed in one week by hunt ers .What is believed 'to be the last mountain lion shot in the State was a Centre County speci men killed in 1880. The first pictorial representa tion of the University's emblem was not, however, that of the mountain lion. "La Vie," the Uni versity yearbook, in 1908 printed a picture of the African variety of the King of Beasts. But the idea of the lion as a Penn State symbol had been established and has been in use ever since. The next important develop ment in the history of the Uni versity's symbol came in 1923 when two alumni, H. I. "Hickey" Smith 'O7 and Cuthbert Mather '2l, went hunting in Colorado and bagged two specimens of moun tain lions, "Felix Cougar," the same kind that had roamed over MoUnt Nittany. These two stuffed specimens watched over athletes in Varsity Hall for many years. To later generations of Penn State students, the Heinz War neke sculpture for the Nittany Lion shrine near the entrance to the football stadium will always be the physical representatiOn of the University's spirit. This statue; three times life contains Activated Charcoal for real filtra tion. Activated Charcoal is used topurify air, water, foods and beverages, so you can appreciate its importance in a filter cigarette. Yes, Filter Tip Tareyton is the filter ciga rette that really filters, that you can really taste ... and the taste is L rem! WEDNESDAY. permit! 12. 1,33. Symbol size, shows a sleek, powerfully muscled mopntain lion crouchod and ready to spring. It was the gift of the Class of 1940. Hewn out of a 13-ton block of Indiana limestone, it was dedicated during Homicoming Weekend in. -Octo ber, 1942. • MacKenzie-- (Continued from page five) Kenneth L. Kolderman, assistant dean of the College of Engineer. ing and Architecture, and Ridge Riley, executive secretary-treas urer of the Alumni Association. Chairman of the promotion and invitations committee is Mrs. Zenda B. Fehrenbach, assistant publications production manager. Other members of the committee are Robert E. Beam, assistant di rector of the Penn State Founda tion, Richard 0. Byers, assistant professor ofjournalism, Robert Krakoff, junior in business ad ministration fr o m Pittsburgh, John Y. Roy, assistant professor of fine arts. and Miss, Mary E. Schwartz, managing editor of the Alumni News. ' Chairmen for the three round table discussion g r oups on in struction will be Dr. Ruth W. Ayres and Dr. Thomas S. Oak wood. Research round-table discussion chairmen are Dr. R. Adams Dut cher and Dr. John A. Sauer. Chairmen for the extension round-tables are T. Stewart Goas and Ralph D. Hetzel, Jr. .1 1 : f.l • ••:.1 FKE.P
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers