The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 02, 1956, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
'Hatters' Will Strut
On Beaver Field
Beaver Field will have an aura of the Easter Parade as
"mad hatters" strut around sporting their original creations
at 6:30 tonight.
At the same time and in the same place, but on the oppo
site side of Beaver Field, the He-Man contest will feature
its muscle men, vying with the "hatters" for the attention
200 Attend
Livestock
Exposition
More than 200 persons attended
the awards banquet held last
Saturday after the Little Inter
national Livestock Exposition.
William B. Connell, who retired
in 1951 as head of livestock ex
tensior-, was presented with a
special citation placque at the
banquet. Dean Belt, president of
the Block and Bridle Club, spon
sor of the show, made the pre
sentation.
Miss Dorothy J. Bowmaster. to
whom the exposition was dedi
cated. was selected as a special
member of the club.
Judging Winners Named
Awards were given to judging
teams and winners of the judging
contest held April 21. Winner of
the professional division was Ver
non Hazlett, junior in animal hus
bandry from Tarentum.
Ann Howard, sophomore in ani
mal husbandry from Hummels
town, was chosen winner of the
amateur judging division.
The two received rotating tro
phies donated by the three agri
culture fraternities.
Ag Secretary Present
Winners of the showing and
fitting contest also received
awards. Edward Woods. senior in
animal husbandry from Brook
ville, was named grand champion
showman, an d Lloyd Arnett,
freshman in animal husbandry
f rem Mechanicsburg, reserve
grand champion showman.
Among the guests present at
the banquet were Dr. William L.
Henning, state Secretary of Agri
culture; Russell B. Dickerson. as
sistant dean of the College of
Agriculture; and Dr. M. A. Far
rell, director of the agriculture
experimental station.
Lion's Paw Names
15 Junior Men
To Organization
Fifteen men have been initiat
ed into Lion's Paw, senior men's
society, James W. Coogan, Lion's
Paw Alumni Association presi
dent, has announced.
New members are Roger Alex
ander, Daily Collegian edit or:
Robert Bahrenburg, All-Univer
sity president; George Buckhout,
Orientation Week chairman; Wil
liam Clark, All-University vice
president: Joseph Eberly, presi
dent of the Chemistry and Phys
ics Student Council.
Ronald Gatehouse, Daily Col
legian city editor; Lash Howes,
Association of Independent Men
president; William Johnson, mem
ber of AIM: Edmond Krame r,
president of the Business Admin
istration Student CounciL
Daniel Land, Interfraternity
Council president; James Musser,
National Student Association co
ordinator; Jerome Radosh, mem
ber of AIM; Donald Reidenbaugh,
Encampment chairman: Leonard
Richards, All-University secre
tary-treasurer; and John Valen
tine, IFC secretary-treasurer.
Datterer Will Address
Philosophical Society
Meetings of the Western Penn
sylvania Philosophical Society
will be held at 10:30 a.m. Satur
day in the Hetzel Union Building.
Teachers of philosophy from
colleges in Western Pennsylvania
will hear Dr. Ray H. Dotterer,
professor emeritus of philosophy,
speak on "The Role of Philosophy
in General Education."
A panel will be held with Dr.
John A: Mourant. professor of
philosophy; as moderator.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA
of the crowd
AU contestants and bands in the
Mad Hatters Parade must be in
position by 5:45 p.m. at Recrea
tion Hall. All those who are not
in position at that time will be
disqualified.
From Rec Hall, the contestants
will march en masse to the Bea
ver Field parkng lot where mem
bers of the committee will place
them in the proper category and
issue each entry a number in the
category.
Theme Is Book Titles
The theme for the Mad Hatters
parade is book titles and contes
tants will be placed in one of the
three categories, artistic, comic
and original. One winner will be
picked from each category and all
three winners will be awarded
trophies. In addition, each winner
will receive 25 Spring Week
points.
Judges for the parade are Ralph
H. Wherry, professor of insurance,
John Juba, State College chief of
police, Agnes Doody, instructor of
speech, Charles Petnick, owner of
the Charles Shop, and Dean
Smith, manager of the Rathkellar.
He-Men to Compete
Thirteen men will compete for
the title of l-le-Man in the contest
tonight at Beaver Field. Each can
didate will participate in the
bench press, the 220-yard dash,
and the running broad jump in an
attempt to gain the title. Entrants
will also compete in a physique
contest and an original name and
costume parade which will pre
cede the finals. Members of the
groups sponsoring the finalists
may work with the contestants in
the parade.
The winner of the He-Man con
test will be presented with a tro
phy and will receive 15 Spring
Week points. Each of the runners
up will receive a medal. Second
place winner will receive 10
Spring Week points; third place
winner, 8; fourth place, 6; and
each of the finalists will receive
3 points.
In the event of rain, both the
Mad Hatters Parade and the He-
Man contest will -be held in
Schwab Auditorium at the sched
uled time. However, in the He-
Man contest, the events will be
changed as those events sched
uled for Beaver Field could not
be held in Schwab.
4 Finalists Seek
Dairy Queen Title
The Dairy Queen will be chosen
from four finalists by the Dairy
Science Club at 7 p.m. tomorrow
in 117 Dairy.
The finalists and their sponsors
are Barbara Albeck, sophomore
in applied arts from Duncannon,
Sigma Sigma Sigma; Karen Bix
ler, sophomore in home economics
from Huntingdon, Gamma Phi
Beta; Martha McDonald, senior in
home economics from Shippens
burg, Phi Mu; and Patsy Paxton,
sophomore in education from Me
chanicsburg, Zeta Tau Alpha.
The dairy science department
chose the finalists who will ap
pear at the Thursday meeting.
APhio Will Initiate
Spring Pledge Class
Initiation ceremonies for the
spring pledge class of Alpha Phi
Omega, national service honorary
society, will be held at 5:30 p.m.
May 11 in 212 and 213 Hetzel
Union.
Banquet tickets will be on sale
for $2 at the HUB desk until noon
Saturday for brothers of Alpha
Phi Omega. Pledge tickets have
already been taken care of.
The pledge banquet, honoring
80 new initiates, will be held at
7 p.m. after the initiation cere
monies at the Autoport restau
rant.
2 Cruises
Scheduled
By NROTC
The Navy Department has an
nounced summer training plans
for undergraduates taking naval
reserve of f icer training. Two
cruises will involve University
students.
Forty one junior midshipmen
and 45 freshman midshipmen will
leave Norfolk, Va., July 9. on an
eight-week cruise to Barcelona
and Valencia, Spain.
On the return trip they will
make stops at Belfast and Dublin,
Ireland, and Glasgow, Scotland,
before sailing on to Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba for a week of gunnery
training.
Task Force to Gibraltar
They will return to Norfolk
Aug. 31. The students will be
distributed among 15 ships which
will sail as a task force to the
Strait of Gibraltar, where it will
break up and the ships will con
tinue singly to their destinations.
The other cruise, which will last
six weeks, leaves Norfolk July 15
and arrives in New Orleans July
25. From there it will sail on to
Cristobal, Canal Zone, then to
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and will
return to Norfolk Aug. 24.
Cruises Includes 3 Phases
Twenty ships will comprise the
second cruise, and 24 junior mid
shipmen from the University will
take part in it. Both cruises will
Ibe divided into three phases of
training, which will emphasize
seamanship and navigation, gun
nery, and engineering.
In addition to the two cruises,
25 sophomore midshipmen will
take eight weeks of amphibious
aviation training, four weeks at
Little Creek, Va., and four at
Corpus Christi, Texas.
Four Juniors
Receive Aid
Four junior women have been
awarded Charlotte E. Ray scholar
ships by Mortar Board, senior
women's honorary society.
They are Carole Denniston,
education major from State Col
lege; Barbara Dietrich, arts and
letters major from Tunkhannock;
Elizabeth Ives, arts and - letters
major from Scranton; and Helen
Thompson, arts and letters major
from Slippery Rock.
The scholarships, worth $lOO
each, are awarded each year to
junior women who have a good
scholastic record, major activities,
and who have depended on their
own funds for their college edu
cation.
The scholarships were estab
lished in 1946 in honor of Miss
Ray, former dean of women. Pro
ceeds from the Mardi Gras go
toward the scholarship fund.
4 Councils to Get
AIM Appropriations
The Association of Independent
Men's Board of Governors will
appropriate funds to its four
councils at its meeting at 7 to
night in the student government
of the Hetzel Union Building.
AIM President Lash Howes said
that the constitution may have to
be revised if the board wants to
raise the appropriations from the
usual 33 per cent to 40 per cent.
The councils are West Hall. Pol
lock, Nittany Councils and Town
Independent Men.
An appropriation will also be
made to finance the AIM Hand
book. •
Mild, Cloudy Weather
Predicted for Today
The weather today will be part
ly cloudy and mild, according to
the students of the department of
meteorology.
The high today Is predicted for
the mid-sixties, and the low in
the mid-forties. Yesterday's high
was 66 and the low was 36.
Etnire Moved to Pacific
Commander . R. K. Etnire, ex
ecutive officer of the naval re
serve unit on campus for the last
two years, has been transferred
to the USS Cape Esperance, now
in the Pacific.
Chapel Construction
Nears Completion
The first le gof the All-Faith Chapel is nearing completion.
Workmen are putting finishing touches on the Helen Eakin
Eisenhower Meditation Chapel, and expect to complete the
structure in the near future.
Painters are almost finished inside the chapel, and men are
putting in millwork. According to the construction •foreman,
cement for the concrete walks in
back of the Chapel is being laid.
The work schedule calls for flag
stone to be laid on the side patio.
The meditation chapel will be
the f irst part of the All-Faith
Chapel to be finished. Construc
tion is scheduled to start on the
main chapel as soon as the funds
can be secured.
Other construction jobs on cam
pus are also progressing rapidly.
Frame Near Completion
Because of the good weather,
the steel frame of the Hall of
Americas classroom build in g,
west of the University Infirm
ary is nearing completion. The
construction for em a n for the
building said yesterday if the
weather holds out, two-inch con
crete slabs will be poured, in two,
weeks,
The slabs will be poured for
each floor of the building, lathe
work will be placed on the slabs,
and masonry completed on top of
the lathe work. Workers expert to
finish the building by November.
Hospital Construction Progressing
Workers are in the process of
putting finish plastering on the
new hospital wings, and expect
to start laying floor tile within a
few days. According to the hospi
tal construction workers, they
could start laying tile now, if they
had it.
In addition to floor tiling, plans
call for plumbing and electrical
fixtures to be put in soon, and
millwork to be completed before
the wings will be put into use.
One wing will be used as a dis
pensary, replacing the one in the
basement of Old Main; the other
wing will provide beds for pa
tients.
Completion of the wings is
scheduled for this summer.
Housing Office Almost Finished
The new housing office in War
ing Hall should be completed in
a few days, with only painting,
door hanging, and cabinet con
struction uncompleted, workers
on the office said yesterday. The
office is being built where the
information desk in Waring was
situated last semester.
In addition, plastic dados must
be put on the walls around War
ring Hall, and the showcases must
be finished. The case has been
built where the bulletin board
was situated last semester, and
the bulletin board has been
mowed to the wall opposite the
post office sub-station.
Sigma Delta Chi
Selects Nine Men
For Membership
Sigma Delta Chi, national men's
professional journalism fraternity,
has tapped nine men.
Members of Sigma Delta Chi
must undertake journalism as a
profession and have an above av
erage scholastic rating. They are
also required to have done actual
and proficient work in journal
ism, either in or out of college.
. Those tapped are John Law
rence, senior from Philadelphia;
Marino Parascenzo, junior from
Ellwood City; Earl Kohnf elder,
sophomore from Pittsburgh; Emil
Haas, junior from Pottsville; Har
ry Davis, junior from Clairton;
Lawrence Jacobson, sophomore
rfrom Chester; Edward Dubbs,
sophomore fr o m Waynesboro;
Vincent Carocci, sophomore from
'Scranton; and William Kling,
sophOmore from York.
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5:- COLLEGE MEN
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See Mr. Cronin%
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.:_- Thursday, May 3 7 p.m. F..
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WEDNESDAY.. MAY 2. 1956
11 Students
Awarded
Scholarships
Five graduate students in chem.
istry have been appointed to fel
lowships, and six students in the
College of Business Administra
tion have been awarded scholar.
ships for the next academic year,
Those who have been appointed
to fellowships are: Robert Boyd,
Eastman Kodak Co. Fellowship;
Richard Javick, Shell Fellowship;
Carl Perizzolo, Union Carbide and
Carbon Fellowship; and Dwight
Smith, DuPont Company Teach
ing Fellowship.
Insurance Club Award -
Scholarships have been award.
ed to: Gerald Beam, Insurance
Club Scholarship presented to art
outstanding junior majoring in in
surance by the Penn State In
surance Club; George Borosque,
Frank Carlucci Insurance Schol
arship, awarded to an outstanding
junior majoring in insurance by
Frank Carlucci, general agent for
Connecticut Mutual Life Insur
ance Co., Wilkes-Barre.
Devoe Memorial Award
Harry Brown, Devoe Memorial
Scholarship, awarded. to an out
standing sophomore majoring in
finance by th e Pennsylvania
Credit Union League; Eugene
Curry, New York Life Insurance
Co. scholarship, awarded to an
outstanding freshman in the field
of insurance.
Paul Gilpin, General_ Electric
Scholarship in Accounting, award
ed to an outstanding junior in the
field of accounting; and Leroy
Wagner, Pilot Freight Carriers,
Inc., scholarship, given to an out
standing junior majoring in trans
portation by Pilot Freight Car
riers, Inc., Winston Salem, N.C.
STATE
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