The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 05, 1957, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
Blood Donors Promised
Trophies, Movie Tickets
Trophies and free movie tickets will be given to groups
and individuals showing the most response to the Red Cross
blood drive to be held frOm 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and
Wednesday in the Hetzel Union cardroom.
Alpha Zeta, co-sponsoring the drive, will award trophies
Men Work
On Sewer
Near Inn
Workmen are still repairing a
sewer that was damaged by a
cave-in Sunday night near the
Nittany Lion Inn.
The cave-in occurred when a
limestone cavern, one of many on
campus, wore away until it could
support the soil no longer, the
division of landscape construction
and maintenance said.
The cave-in left a gaping hole
15 feet deep, and large enough to
•`fit two cars in," according to
a spokesman for the division.
Repairs Interrupted
Repair work was interrupted by
the bad weather yesterday and
Wednesday, but it is expected to
be completed sometime next
week.
To prevent further cave-ins, the
landscape division will underlay
the sewer with a reinforced con
crete mat.
Cave-ins of this type are com
mon on the campus, especially in
the area of Beaver Field.
Cave-ini Frequent
Special cave-ins occurred on
the track in Beaver Field last
year, and in one previous year a
surprised runner was swallowed
up by the evasive soiL He was
uninjured in the accident.
Another cavern showed itself
when work was begun on a cam
pus building some years back.
Workmen sinking a caison en
countered the underground hole
and had to continue to more solid
rock over 100 feet below the sur
face.
Borough OK's
Building Plans
The borough yesterday gave its
approval to plans for two major
building projects, a $250,000 busi
ness-district building and a $lOO,-
000 apartment house.
Plans were approved for a one
story building to replace the Pas
time Building a 4 - the corner of
S. Allen St. and Calder alley.
The structure will be 187 feet
long and 54 feet wide, and will be
constructed of cinder block with
porcelain block panels across the
front.
No date has been set for demol
ishing the present building. The
occupants were ordered to vacate
by last Monday. The future occu
pant has not been revealed.
Also approved was a 22-unit
apartment house for S. Allen St.
near Atherton St. The building is
owned by Falk Bros.. the designer
and builder is William Hajjar.
TIM Softball Meeting
A Town Independent Men Soft
ball League meeting will be held
at 8:45 p.m. Monday in 213 Hetzel
Union.
SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT
EARN $9O PER WEEK
WIN A $3OO CASH SCHOLARSHIP
You can earn $9O to $125 per week for
summer work. Be your own boss, set your
own hours of work in the territory of your
choice. Car necessary. Phone Mr. Kern. ADams
-7-7671, Tuesday, April 9, 9:00 a.m. - 4 1:00 p.m.
only.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
to the fraternity and sorority with
the greatest percentage of mem
bers donating blood to the drive.
The Association of Independent
Men, also sponsoring the drive,
will give movie tickets to the first
100 independent students, male or
female, who give blood.
Dorm Prize Planned
The dormitory uni: having the
highest percentage of residents
donating blood will be awarded
$lO by AIM fOr their unit treas
ury.
Students under 21 must secure,
minor release forms before theyl
may donate blood. These forms
are available at fraternity houses,
sorority suites, the HUB desk and
Ifrom dormitory counselors. The
forms must be sent home for
parental signature. Students un
der 18 are not permitted to give
blood.
Donors are also asked to sub
mit a schedule of their free hours
when they pick up minor release
forms so an appointment may be
made for them. Appointments
are expected to speed up the
process. Walk-ins will also be
accepted.
Donors Examined
Donors will be examined be
forehand by Red Cross workers
and University Hospital doctors
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 entire process of. donating
blood and resting afterward is
expected to take about an
. hour.
Orange juice, cookies, coffee and
donuts will be served.
News Glimpses
===l=
WASHINGTON WI Gen. Cur
tis E. LeMay, chief of the Stra
tegic Air Command, today was
tapped to become vice chief of
staff of the Air Force.
It is expected that LeMay will
take over hi: new job some time
after July 1.
The announcement made no
mention of a successor for LeMay
in the Strategic Air Command.
Shanghai Crime Drops
HONG KONG, April 4 (JP)—Pei
ping radio boasted that Shanghai,
Red China's largest city, has had
no robberies for 10 months. The
broadcast said that b e f or er the
Communists took over there was
an average of two robberies daily
in the city of seven million.
Med School Gifts Cited
NEW YORK, April 4 (IPJ-A to
tal of 1737 business and industrial
firms contributed $1,862,016 to 82
of the nation's 82 medical schools
in 1956, the National Fund for
Medical Education reported. In
1955, contributions from 1525
firms totaled $1,693,048.
CANBERRA, April 4 GP)—Ro
bert G. Menzies has set a record
of 2633• consecutive days as prime
minister of Australia. Govern
ment people gave him a cake in
scribed,, "Congratulations on your
'marathon record' and may you
(take the cake' for many years
Ito come."
Alderfer
Named To
State Post
Dr. Harold E. Alderfer, former
head of the Department of Po
litical Science, has been appointed
by Gov. George M. Leader as di
rector of program evaluation in
the Office of Administration.
Dr. Alderfer has been assistant
commissioner for operations in
the Urban Renewal Administra
tion, Washington, D.C.. since re
' signing his position as department
head in January 1956.
Dr. Alderfer became head of
the department July 1, 1955. He
had been a member of the faculty
since 1928. Before this, he was
superintendent of schools in Mar
ion, S. D.
He was executive secretary of
the Institute of Local Government
at the University from the Insti
tute's founding in 1936 until he
resigned his post in 1956.
He was on leave from 1949 to
1952 to serve as a local govern
ment specialist for the Mutual Se
curity Agency in Greece.
A native of Souderton, Pa., Dr.
Alderfer was graduated from
Bluffton College in Bluffton,
Ohio, and received his M.A. and
Ph.D.- from Syracuse University.
He holds an honorary doctor of
laws degree from Parsons College,
Fairfield, lowa.
Dr. Alderfer succeeds Dr. Ro
bert A. Christie, acting director
who becomes assistant to the new
appointee.
Elections--
(Continued from page one)
Carl Beats and Howard Van Du
sen tied for the senior aeronauti
cal engineering seat and Richard
Mills and John Myers tied for the
junior mechanical engineering
seat.
The results of the agricultural
engineering were delayed until
returns from agriculture groups
are reported.
Elected to the council, by curriculum
were, aeronautical engineering, sophomore
seat. Jerome Neil, and junior seat,• James
McLaughlin architectural engineering and
architecture, sophomore seat, Abbe Poiagin ;
junior seat. Andy Yaronak (by a write-in
rote); fourth year senior seat. Gordon
Rutherford; fifth-year senior seat, John
Haas.
Civil engineering. sophomore seat. How
ard Cohen; junior seat, Allan Kraft,. and
senior seat, John Park; electrical engineer
ing, sophomore seat, Peter Packard: junior
seat, Russell Scott, and senior seat Ray
mond Kelly.
Engineering Science, junior seat, Jur!
Niiler, and senior - seat, Al Jones; industrial
engineering, sophomore seat. Joseph Ferrer;
junior seat. Richard Wilson, and senior
seat, Thomas Seratin ; mechanical engineer
ing, sophomore seat, Jerome Freed, and
senior seat, Guy Rhodes. .
Liberal Arts
Elected to sophomore seats on the Liberal
Arts Student Council were Joyce Basch,
Lawrence Brady. David Epstein. Aileen
Feldman. Leonard Julius, Judith Stock,
Barbara Stone and Susan Sunderland.
Elected to junior seats were Patricia
Evans, James Ferraro, Robert Franklin,
Richard Friedman, Sandra Gusky, Nancy
Kepler, Barbara Martino. Patricia O'Neill.
Louis Phillips, Lynn Ward and Rachel
Waters.
Elected to senior seats were Fred Bon
net, Marilyn Elias, George Harrison, James
Jimirro, Kenneth Slotniek, Katharine Vyse
and Ronald Weitz.
Mineral Industries
Elected to sophomore seats on the Min
eral Industries Student Council were Mi
chael Bonaroti and Harry Chambers; to
junior scats, William Sekeras and George
Mair, and to senior seats. John Diener,
James Seastone and Robert Yeager.
Students
For WH
Men students may apply for rooms in the West Halls for
the next school year beginning May 1.
Applicants should apply between 8 a.m. and noon and
1 p.m. and 5 p.m. from May 1 to 10 at 102 Waring Hall.
One-hundred assignments
seniors, who must have a 2.0
Eighty rooms are set aside for
juniors: They must have a 2.5 av
erage.
Sophomore Rooms
Sophomores may apply for res
idence in the 70 rooms reserved
for them. They must have a 3.0
All-University average.
The average used is the All-
University average tfie student
had at the end of the fall semester
1956-57.
Application forms will be avail
able at the Kearns Hall Post Of
fice (Nittany 20) and at 102 War
ing beginning May 1. Assignment
will be determined by the draw
ing of numbers, conducted by
representatives of the Association
of Independent Men.
$lO Deposit
Students assigned will be re
quired to pay a $lO room deposit.
The payment is due within 10
days after the notice of room as
signment is sent to the student.
Upperclass assignments will not
be made until July.
If payment is not received at
the office of the bursar within 10
days, the student will lose his
room assignment and his place
on the waiting list.
Annual Contract
Upon payment of the $lO room
deposit, the student obligates him
self to live in West, Halls for ,
the full aacdemic school year if
he enrolls at the University.
Upperclassmen who are not eli
gible to apply for West Hail rooms.
because of scholastic standing,
may file application for residence
hall rooms during the period May
13 through 24.
Specific instructions will be
posted on residence hall bulletin
boards May 10.
•A. natural bridge as long as a
city block, Utah's Sipapu arch,
takes its name from a Hopi In
dian name meaning "entrance to
the underworld."
•
94
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•.
•
Hy. Q—the brilliant scholar
tells how to stretch your dollar
Greyhound's the way to go—
saves you time as well as dough!
Pittsburgh .. $4.15
Philadelphia $4.70
Easton $4.65
Scranton ... $4.30
Allentown .. $4.20
Lancaster . . $2.90
It's such a comfort to take the bus
...and leave the driving to usi
G R Eyci OuN D . .
,
•
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BUS TERMINAL 148 1 / 2 N. Atherton St. .- AD 7-4181
•••i•e:•••••••••••••••_••••••••••••••e•s•
FRIDAY. APRIL 5, 1957
May Apply
Housing
are reserved for next year's
All-University average.
Sophomores May Apply
For Board Membership
Applications for the Junior
Class Advisory Board may be
submitted at the Hetzel Union
desk until noon April 13. Only
sophomores may apply.
Applications should include the
student's name, address, activities,
Alf-university average and the
reason the student would like to
be a member.
•The first United States coin on
which the motto "In God We
Trust" appeared was a two-cent
piece coined in 1864.
Get Ready for
SPRING -
1
.i r ) ' N
4 Nj . L it e . .. • g
. • -,..-' c i _
Te • -
with
COLOR FILM
for Outdoor and Flash
Pictures
Photofinishing for Color Films
by Eastman, Pavane, and
Pathecolor
•
at
Griggs Pharmacy
120 E. College Ave.
Bethlehem $4.35
Johnstown . . . . $2.90
New Alexandria $3.30
York $2.75
Chambersburg .. $3.65
Wilkes-Barre ... $3.85
All palm plus tax