Today's orecast: lurries ; 37-4 2 Snow J High, 'OL. 57. No. TC Plays War —Daily Collegian Photo by George Harrison MOCK WARFARE took place on the University farms yesterday afternoon near ihe saw mill. All juniors in advanced Army ROTC took part in the battle, with .20 on the defending aggressor force and 80 on the friendly side. Left to right are Joseph Baliu&nik, junior in geophysics and geochemistry from Munnsville, N.Y.; Jacob Timbers, junior in business administration from Philadel phia; John Chatham, junior in education from Haveriown; Arthur Schravesande, junior in labor management relations from Haver town; Richard Eldridge, junior in business administration from Upper Montclair, N.J. Sr. Night Combined With Baccalaureate The Senior Class Advisory Board Wednesday night de cided unanimously to combine the Baccalaurate service and Class Night into one program on June 7. An informal survey taken this week by advisory board members revealed that most seniors interviewed would pre fer the; combined program. Committee Sets Plan to Restrict Charity Drives A basic policy statement which would restrict solicitations for fund-raising drives has been drawn up by the Senate Commit tee bn Student Affairs. The rule states: “Solicitations or. any fund rais ing endeavor for charitable pur poses among students, by students or student organizations, shall be limited to' causes affecting the welfare of students at the Uni versity or the welfare of students at other institutions' of higher learning.” Campaigns Have Grown The rule was written because the number of fund raising cam paigns this year has grown and become a problem, Wilmer E. Kenworthy, director of student af fairs, said. | “From time to time it will prob ably require interpretation on specific requests,” he said, such as a request from the, cancer or heart association J- something which would indirectly affect students. "I don’t think it would rule out any groups particpating in Cam pus Chest,.but would strengthen the Chest drive,” he continued. To Serve as Yardstick Kenworthy said the new rule will serve as a yardstick to mea sure the cause of a fund drive and its relationship to students and the University. A general University rule, orig inated by the former Council of (Continued on page jour) Sljt Hath} |§| (Hull x y V / Under the plan the program would retain most of the Bac calaureate service and would in clude the'valedictorial and.salu tatorial addresses, the presenta tion of the class gift and senior honors. Joseph Hartnett, Senior .class president, said ' the reasons for combining the programs are that in the past' there has been poor attendance at both events and nei ther program has been as good as it could be. Parents Would Attend Under the plan, Hartnett said, parents on campus for graduation exercises the following day would probably attend the Baccalaure ate-Class Night Service. Hartnett appointed Patricia Lunibard, senior in education from Erie, Joanne Seaman, senior in education from Ebensburg, and Rebecca Zahm, senior in journal ism from Johnstown to a commit tee to plan the program. In other business Hartnett an nounced that a Dean’s reception planned for seniors and their guests and to honor all academic and administrative deans will be held May 19 in the HUB ball room. Senior Ball Band The board voted to hire the Lord Berges calypso band for in termission at the Senior Ball May 3 in Recreation Hall. In order that senior who at tend the bal lon a split ticket will be able to hear Lord Berges, there will be two intermissions from 10:30-p.m. to 11p.m. and from 11:45 p.m. to 12:45 pm. The ball will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. with the music of the Tommy Tucker orchestra. Tickets are available at the HUB desk for $5. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 12. 1957 Murray to Emcee Revue Jan Murray, nationally known entertainer, will em cee an All-Service Revue to be given by the Naval Pen sacola Glee Club and the Second Army Division from Ft. Meade, Md., on May 2 in Recreation Hall. The revue will replace the originally planned Spring Week outdoor music festival which was to feature star stage personalities but was blocked in February by the Senate Committee on Student Affairs. The committee felt that hav ing an outdoor festival would be" too great a risk and too much of an extravaganza. Murray is best known for his weekly television show, "Dol lar a Second,” and the Pensa MacKenzie Named New Vice President Ossian R. MacKenzie, dean of the College of Business Administration, has been named Vice President for Business Administration. The appointment was approved at a special meeting of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees in Pitts burgh and became effective upon approval. Dean MacKenzie, who has been serving since last September as Special Assistant to the President for Business Affairs, fills a new position created by the Board of Trustees in January. He will also continue as dean. MacKenzie was named to the University faculty in 1953 as the first dean of the College of Busi ness Administration. Born in Hampden, Maine, Dean MacKenzie attended high school in Missoula, Mont., and graduated from the University of Montana in 1928 with a B.A. degree in journalism. Following three years of study in economics at Harvard Univer sity, Dean MacKenzie in 1931 joined the trust department of the Guaranty Trust Co., of New York. During four of his eight years in this position, he attended 7 Finalists Will Vie For Ugly Man Title Seven of the ugliest men on campus will try to outdo each other in horror-filled presentations of macabre themes in the Ugly Man contest finals tonight. The fraternities selected by penny voting to compete are Alpha Gamma Rho, Alpha Chi Rho, Beta Sigma Rho, Zeta Beta-Tau, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa Sigma, and Phi Sigma Delta. The skits will begin at 6 to night in the Helzel Union ball room.- Each one must last no more than six minutes and may include any number of fratern ity men and coeds. The groups will appear in alphabetical or der. The contestants run the gamut fiom fairy tale characters to de formed and hanging men. Alpha Gamma Rho’s huge, white-shrouded mummy, Iknaton, will be carried in state by his fra ternity brothers and members of Trion colony chanting “Iknaton for ugly man, for Iknaton is dead.” The brother in mummy’s clothing is Glen Elder. Captain Hook, complete with jagged scar and black eye patch will swagger into the HUB for Alpha Chi Rho. He and his pirate crew will be chasing green-clad Peter Pans and Wendys, members of Beta Sigma O micron sorority. cola Glee Club from Pensa cola, Fla., has appeared several times on the Ed Sullivan Show. The Army Division will put on the “Showboat Jamboree,” which is a rock and roil calypso variety show. Tickets for the show will go on sale April 24 for SI. Al lhough the tickets will be sold on an individual basis, sections will be roped off in Hec Hall so that fraternities and sorori ties may sit in blocks. Proceeds from the event will go to the Penn State Scholar ship Fund—which is primarily supported by Spring Week funds—and three national char ities, The Red Cross. Easter Seal and March of Dimes. Murray will spend the last third of the program present- Fordham University Law School at night and in 1938 qualified for a bachelor of laws degree. He was admitted to practice before the New .York State Bar the same year. From 1939 to 1943, when Dean MacKenzie entered the Marine Corps, he was head of the state and local tax department of Al lied Chemical and Dye Corpora tion. In the Marine Corps, he served] as adjutant of an air fighterj squadron. He continues to be ac-i tive as a major in the Marine! Corps Reserve. i Early in 1946, Dean MacKenzie joined the tax department of West Penn Electric -Co., and he : was head of this department in 1947 when he resigned to join the administrative staff of Columbia ' University. By MARIAN BEATTY !The man behind the hook is Nor man Smith. A burlap-draped hunchback of Old Main will be entered by Bela Sigma Rho and Alpha Ep silon Phi. The hunchback, who is Robert Krakoff. will be flank ed by purple-smeared mad women. Zeta Beta Tau and Phi Sigma! Sigma will contrast beauty andl the beast. The beast is Stanley! Selbst. Last year’s winner, Lambda Chij Alpha, has borrowed from the fairy books to present Captain] Pinocchio. Jack Calderone will be the long-nosed scamp from story land, supported by Alpha Xi Delta. Gene Foster, Phi Kappa Sig ma’s ugly man, will be hanged in the HUB. The fraternity and members of Chi Omega soror ity will be on hand to sing dirges as "Festered Foster" is led to the gallows. The finals will be ended by Phi : Sigma Delta’s mammoth black spider, Israel Schwab. - pgtatt Old Cabinet See Page 6 ing 27 trophies to the Spring Week contest winners. One trophy will be awarded to the all-over wii ner of Spring Week, nine to the win ners of Carnival and nine to the winners of the Mad Hallers Contest three lor the first place winners in each category in each event. Two trophies will be present ed to the first and second place winners of the He-Man Con test, one for the winner of the Queen-of - Hearts Tournament, one for the winner of Corona tion and four for the Corona tion finalists. The 61 men in the glee club and the 17 men in the “Show boat Jamboree” will be housed in fraternities and the four army WACS will be housed in dormitories. Ossian R. MacKenzie New Vice President jMail Service On Saturday May Be Cut WASHINGTON, April 11 (£>)— The House adjourned today until Monday, in the face of a Saturday deadline set by Postmaster Gen eral Arthur E. Summerfield for cutting back mail service unless he gets more money. This made certain, on the basis of. Summerfield’s statement to Centre County will have no Saturday mail service if the Postmaster General sticks to his ultimatum. County post mas ters have received orders to dose post offices Saturdays, beginning this week, unless contrary instructions are re ceived. Window services, city delivery and rural service will be discontinued Saturdays. State College Postmaster Robert Miller said local offices would be open only five days a week, Monday through Fri day. The order does not affect the dispatching of mails or special delivery service. !senators, that there will be no regular mail deliveries this Sat urday, and that no post offices v ill be open Saturday and Sun day. ] These were the first two cut iback steps ordered by Summer field, to be effective tomorrow at midnight, unless his department was given another 47 million dollars to operate on during the remainder of the fiscal year end ing June 30. 'Jim Dandy* Tickets Tickets for the Players’ produc tion, “Jim. Dandy,” by William Saroyan, are on sale at the Hetzel Union desk. Price is $l. The play will be presented at 8 tonight-and tomorrow night at Center Stage. . FIVE CENTS
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