WEDNESDAY. MAY 1. 1957 Wild West Spirit W « 1 l 1 HIGH KICKING COWGIRLS were lhe feature ailaclion at the booth sponsored by Theta Kappa Phi and "A" level Thompson Hall. Carnival Sidelights They had to fight to do it! power facilities threatened at one But the youngsters managed to time to curtail some of the carni mateh the numbers of students val’s activities. But cooperation who crowded onto the ferris between shows and carnival offi wheel, the “flying saucer” and cials remedied the situation, the other amusements at Spring Many lights judged to be un- Week Carnival last night. necessary were .turned off to save The made-to-order night and the night from more drastic mea the general gaiety drove students sures onto the various rides, anti they screamed and enjoyed themselves just ,as much as the younger crowd. * * The midway was gay, but the people were just as much fun to watch. A graduate student and his wife fought their greatest marital bat tle as they chewed to the center of a foot-long hot dog in a novel race. But neither was concerned with winning for long—they soon found .their blouse fronts covered with oozing mustard. * * ♦ A too-heavy drain on electric Prof Named as Delegate Dr. Hans Neuberger, professor of meteorology and head of the Department of Meteorology, has been named ■ to represent the American Meteorological Society in the Division of Earth Sciences of the National Academy of Sci ence-National Research Council. CONGRATULATIONS PENN STATE t • /v 1957 GRADUATING CLASS J : " FROM KING-SEELEY CORPORATION ?r- ANN ARBOR/ MICHIGAN- . What are YOUR PLANS for FUTURE EMPLOYMENT Wo have OPPORTUNITIES for graduate electrical and mechanical engineers, engineering physics graduates and graduates with B.S. in our engineering laboratory. We also have opportunities for graduates with 8J3.A.. 8.5., B.A. and industrial engineering in standards, production control, plant layout estimating, accounting, production supervision and personnel. " Information on our organization is in the placement office. Drop, in and arrange for a personal interview. Our Representative Will Be Oil The Campus Tuesday, May 7, 1957 —Daily Collrtlan Photo by Marly Scharr By DAVE FINEMAN One carnival goer found ten minutes of pleasure in watch ing one of'h»s professors, whom he called the "terror of the eco nomics department," .taking bis children one-bv one for rides on the ferris wheel. Some -people find fun in the oddest things. No one has figured out yet why someone in a straw hat bear ing the ofiicia! blue committee ribbon was darting in and out of carnival shows. Was he really looking into a report of imp*:- priety? Ag Engineer Society Robert Decker, a research agri cultural' engineer from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, will speak to the American Society of Agricultural Engineers at 7 to night in 105 Agricultural Engi neering. THE DAILY lOLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PEI Ticket Sales For Revue Reach 200 Approximately 200 tickets have been sold for the All-Service Re vue to be held at 8 p.m. tomor row in Recreation Hall. Robert Krakoff, Spring Week chairman, said the committee ex pects -a full house of 4000 per sons tomorrow night. Tickets. $1 apiece, for the show are on sale at the Corner Room, the Mall, West Dorms, the Hetzel Union desk and at door of Rec Hall just before the show. Jan Murray, nationally-known; television personality, will act as ; master of ceremonies. The Naval Aviation Cadet Choir will present the first part of the program. The Second Army showboat jamboree will follow with Dixieland and! calypso music. Murray to Present Trophies Twenty-six Spring Week tro phies will be presented by Jan Murray as the climax to Spring Week. Dean of Women Pearl O. Wes-' ton has granted women students extended hours until the show is over. Twenty-three fraternities will meet members of the All-Service Review cast at 4:30 p.m. tomor row in the Hetzel Union Building to take the men to their fraternity houses. Fraternities to House Stars The following fraternities will house the men: Phi Delta Theta. Sigma Tau Gamma, Sterna Alpha Epsilon. Beta Theta Pi, Beta Sigma Rho, Alpha Tau Omega, Theta Chi. Sigma Pi. Phi Kappa. Triangle, Pi Kappa Alpha. Delta Chi. Alpha Gamma Rho, Sterna Phi Epsilon. Phi Gamma Delta. Tau Kappa Epsilon, Alpha Chi Rho' Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa Psi. Alpha Sterna Phi. Delta Ste* ma Phi. Phi Sigma Delta, and Delta Up silon. Officers Elected By Blue Band Jere Fridy, junior in music education from Palmyra, has been elected president of the Blue Band for the coming year. Other officers elected are Da vid-A. James, sophomore in hotel administration from New Cum berland, manager; James E. Bak er, junior in . music education from Espy, assistant manager; John Bezek, junior in music edu cation from Nanty Glo, secretary treasurer. Virginia Mensch, junior in mu sic education from Bellefonte, librarian; Harry Brown, sopho more in' the division of inter mediate registration from Phila delphia, assistant librarian; and Sandra Reimer, sophomore in education from New Cumberland, historian. INSYLVANIA 'lnjun Fun' —Daily Collegian Photo by Marty Schorr INDIAN WAR DANCE performed by Lorna Swoitzer. sophomore in business administration from Reading and Jack Loßue. soph omore in industrial engineering from McKeesport, attracted many students to the Chi Omega-Phi Kappa Sigma booth. 'Disneyland (Continued pom page one) was very pleased with the entire carnival, according to Robert Krakoff, Spring Week chairman. He said the groups all pitched in and provided “a lot of fine entertainment.” Three campus patrolmen and one Borough policemen were on hand at the carnival grounds to regulate traffic and watch over the carnival scene. Three groups, Zeta Beta Tau, Sigma Tau Gamma, and Sigma Nu and Alpha Tau Omega, who had originally entered the carni val, did not construct booths or produce shows at the carnival. Several small power failures caused shows to be stopped for a short time, but power was gen erally restored quickly enough to keep an interested audience. Fraternities, sororities and in dependent groups displayed end less ingenuity in their construc tion of booths. Displays, all the way from castle fronts to time machines, -decorated the bright, colorful midway. Dancing bare-legged girls and three or four piece jazz bands seemed to- attract the - greatest crowds on the outside. Conges tions occurred sporadically when shows were over and groups ofj spectators attempted to enter and! leave the show booths at the samt time. As the evening got cooler tha concessions selling hot foods were thronged with children, show characters and carnival-goers. Microphones and public .address systems, records, shouting bark ers and singing groups provided the festive noise for the evening. The roving crowds added to it with their shouts of approval. Riding Club Elections The Riding Club will hold elec tions at 7 tonight in 217 Willard. Gilbert Mather, master of fox hounds at a Brandywine hunting club, will discuss hunting calls and their use. I LOVE tha food HE PENN STATE DINER PAGE nvi