PAGE 11M0 2d Blood Drive of Year Begins Today in HUB The second annual blood drive of the school year will be held today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the card room of the Hetzel Union building. Three hundred and sixty-seven persons have pledged donations. A goal of 500 pints has been set. The drive on campus is directed toward students, al - IFC Committee Gives Summer Housing Report The interfraternity Council night heard a report from t • Summer Housing Committ. which outlined a method for sev eral fraternities banning together in order to keep a certain number of houses open during the sum mer sessions. The proposed plan called for three or four fraternities •going together and rotating over the years so that an equal plan would be set up for each of the how to remain open. one each sum mer from each group. Delegate Ilitsponsible Person' The committee also suggested that in the absence of an active member of a fraternity during the summer, a responsible person be delegated to be in charge and work along with the house ad visor. The council unanimously ap proved the latter suggestion. Reports were also given by the Future Housing Committee and the Cultural Committee. The three new IFC officers for next year were also installed at the meeting. Daniel Land was in stalled as president, Howard Thompson as vice president, and John Valentine as secretary treasurer. Makes Three Appointments Land made the following ap pointments: Philip Lang, senior in business administration fr o m Pottstown, Cultural Committee chairman: Steven Jordan, junior in arts and letters from San Bet nadino, Calif.. IFC Executive Sec retary; and Hugh Moore, sopho more in pre-veterinary f rom Lynchburg, Va., IFC Rushing Chairman. Lang called for a meeting of the Cultural Committee at 7:30 to night in 203 Hetzel Union. Army Group Will Hold Rushing Smoker Tonight The Association of the United Army will hold a rushing smoker for sophomore and junior cadets at 7:30 tonight at SiCasa Chi fra ternity. Col. Jerry E. Rouse, assistant professor of military science and tactics, will speak on his mili tary experiences in Europe. A film on the Armored Corps will follow. BEST IN TOWN • ,1 2 ZZE 4 4 ; q t: AIN Oven Hot PIZZA (IDEAL FOR STUDY BREAKS) You've never tasted better PIZZA- Crisp crust generously covered with savory tomato sauce and tangy cheeses---ihe PERFECT TASTE TREAT. Only Horne Delivery Pizza delivers directly to you pip ing hot. or serves Ton in five minutes at the bakery. Special Price for Large Parties Call day. night. and Sundays AD 7-7697 the home delivered PIZZA 129 S. Pugh St. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA though faculty members and ' townspeople may also participate. Students over 21 years of age and those under 21 who have parental consent may donate blood in the campaign. An earlier, drive in November netted 686 pints. AU those wishing to give blood will be examined before hand for any signs of blood infection. The temperature and pulse rate of each prospective donor will be taken, and students with colds will be rejected. The work will be done by Red Cross workers, assisted by doc tors from the University Hospi tal. ‘ .!M . V 1. 1.. 0.6 The examination, drawing of blood, and rest period is expected to take less than one hour. Coffee and doughnuts will be served during the rest period. Mary Mergott, junior in atts and letters from Boston, Mass., is chairman of the campus blood drive. With 367 persons already having pledged blood, the goal of 500 pints has a good chance of being reached, according to Mrs. waiter Coutu, Red Cross worker. Mrs. Coutu stated that the best time for "walk-in" donors will be after 11:15 today and any time tomorrow. 203 Have Pledged Two hundred and three have pledged to donate today, and 164 are scheduled for tomorrow, A new record was set in last spring's drive, when 238 pints of blood were collected during the first day to break the old record by 90 pints. A total of 449 pints were donated in the two-day drive to surpass the goal of 300 pints. 687 Donated In last fall's drive a total of 687 pints of a goal of 990 were do nated. Phi Delta Theta, as its com munity project, is heading the blood drive's promotion. Pledge forms have been distributed to all housing units. The fraternity which has the highest percentage of members as donors will be presented with a two-foot trophy. Phi Delta Theta chose this pro ject because of the great need for blood, according to William Kutz and David Hubert, publicity co chairmen. Panhei Wtll Meet Tonight Panhellenic Council will meet at 6:30 tonight in 203 Hetz el Union to discuss reorganization of committees. aI•milod••••••=it ••/. eamm•mm•mommambe - electrical engineers mechanical engineers 1 physicists I Let ARMA talk with yon about YOUR future in the Dynamic and Challenging Field of Metro-Mechanical Instrumentation S.. ANNA when our representative visits your campus shortly. Ask your Placement Officer for details. Or you sum wad ouvrinot to Mr. Charles S Fernow Aismt istrutor of Tochosool Afloat** ARMA Division American Bosch Arma Corp. Garda' City, Long Island, N.Y. 15.,-..,.-......-...-........- —,...-,.. ----...- 111 Jr. Women To Choose New Rooms Junior women will choose rooms for next year this week,l Edith H. Anderson, assistant to the dean of women, has an nounced. The exact date will be' posted in the dormitories. Rooms are being chosen by class and alphabetical order this year instead of by the usual me thod of number drawings. Wo— men in any class or dormitory who have requested to keep their present room, seniors, and stu dent teachers have already been assigned rooms. Sophomores will sign up after the juniors have chosen rooms. Miss Anderson also said that freshman women are being noti fied when they are being put in temporary living quarters. Thompson Hall, Mac Allister Hall. and Women's Building will be the three freshman women's dor mitories. Elm and Spruce cottages, Grange playroom, and some dorm itory lounges will also be used for housing. Pollock dormitories are as yet not being considered. she said. Women are being assigned to rooms on a first come first served basis, she said. Assignments are made when the application is re ceived. The housing facilities are being filled to overflowing to avoid repetition of this year's large number of vacancies due to drop outs. Professor's Son In 'Fair' Condition The condition of five-year-old Jeffrey Pape, son of Dr. Leslie M. Pape, associate •professor of phil osophy, was listed as "only fair" by a Centre County Hospital, official yesterday after he under went treatment for possible frac tures of the skull and leg fol lowing an auto accident yester day. The youngster was struck by a car at 2:25 p.m. Sunday as he darted across the street in front of his State College home, police said. Police identified the driver of the car as C. J. Vesper of Cam den, N.J. He told police that he tried to avoid the youngster but "it was too late." WH Council to Conduct Presidential Elections The West Halls council will conduct elections for council pres ident at 7 tonight in McKee lounge. _ Nominations will be accepted for the position, and the election will be supervised by a repre sentative of the Association of In dependent Men's election commit tee. Three students were nominat ed at the council's last meeting. Housing Committee To Discuss Survey The housing survey committee of the University . Christian Asso ciation, Hillel, Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, and various student religious groups will meet at 6:45 tonight in 410 Old Main to discuss the progress and problems of the survey. The purpose of the survey is to determine how many residents are willing to rent rooms to for eign students and Atnerican Ne groes. The survey will end April 30. ki ila bruwith IT'S LATER THAN YOU THINK An year long you've been promising yourself to go there. Now summer vacation is just around the corner and yea still haven't set foot in the place. Shame on you! But it's not too late. Right now, this very minute, before you weaken, lift up your head and forward march to the place you have been avoiding ever since school began. I refer, of course, to the library. Now here you are at the library. That wasn't so bad, was it? Of course not! Go inside. What do you see? A sign that says "No SMOKING." Go outside. Light a Philip Morris. Smoke. Go back inside. Because now you are ready. Now your trembling resolution is rigid. Now your pulsing psyche is serene. You have been gentled by gentle Philip Morris. You have been tranquilized by a smoke that dotes and pampers and caresses, that lifts the fallen, repairs the shattered, straightens the bent, unravels the knotted, rights the askew, and fastens the unbuttoned. In the center of the library you see the main circulation desk. Look in the card catalogue for the number of the book you want, write the number on a slip, and hand it to the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk. The efficient and obliging young lady then gives the slip to an efficient and obliging page boy who trots briskly back into the stacks, curls up on a limp leather encyclopedia, and sleeps for an hour or two. Then, puffy but refreshed, he returns your slip to the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk, who tells you one of three things: (a) "Your book is out." (b) "Your book is at the bindery." (c) "Your book is on reserve." Having learned that the circulation desk hasn't the least intention of ever parting with a book, let us now go into the periodical room. Here we spend hours sifting through an imposing array of magazines—magazines from ail the far corners of the earth, magazines of every nature and dwrip tian—but though we search diligently and well, we cannot find Mad or Confidential. Next let us venture into the reference room. Here in this hushed, vaulted chamber, we find the true scholars of the university earnest, dedicated young men and women who care for only one thing in the world : the pursdit of knowledge. Let us eavesdrop for a moment on this erudite couple poring over heavy tomes at the corner table. Hush!, She speaks: SHE: Whatcha readin', hey? Hs: "The Origin of gpecies." You ever read it? Sas: No, but I iseZz.- the movie. Ois SUE: You like readin'T RE: Muth. Sue: What do you like? as: Hockey, licorice, girls, stuff like that. SUE: Me too, hey. HE: You pinned or anything? SUE: Well, sort of. I'm wearin' a fellow's motorcycle emblem.... But it's only platonic. Hg: Wanna go out for a smoke? Sas: Philip Morris? • HE: Of corris! And as our learned friends take their leave, let us too wend our way homeward—a trifle weary, perhaps, but enlightened and renewed and better citizens for having spent these happy hours in the library. Aloha, libraty, aloha! ©? shiiimin, „se The makers of Philip Morris, who sponsor this column, could write volumes about the gentleness of today's Philip Morris, but we'll only tell you this: Take a leaf from our book. Enjoy Philip Morris. TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1956 'Mat you should know about— SENIOR BALL Music by Billy Butterfield Time: FRIDAY, MAY 4; 9-1 Price: $5.00 per Couple Dress: Semi-Formal iatatkor of "Barefoot Boy wi* Cksak," rte.)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers