THURSDAY. OCTOBER 3 H Ec. Caf Good Fo Looking for good foo formal atmosphere? Then try the Home - The cafeteria, locate Economics Building, has Mardi Gra Reg istrati • Will Close Registration for the Mardi carnival and parade on will close at 5 p.m. today Hetzel Union desk. Participation in the event is open to sororities, des and Freshman Council I The outstanding featu this Mardi Gras weekend a parade and carnival night and a jam session Sa afternoon when the Math is crowned. This year for the first ti participants must conform theme of French or Creole New Orleans. Another new event will be the parade Friday night just before the carnival opens in Rec - eation Hall. A motorcade of co turned' coeds and candidates - for -Mardi King will wind across campus. At the carnival the candidates will be presented and five final ists selected by penny vote. Cups will be awarded 'to the groups selling the most tickets in both open booth and closed show categories. Participants in the parade will automatically re ceive 50 points. Proceeds from the booths and king competition will go to a scholarship for-a foreign woman student and will cover all 'ex penses for a year at the Univers ity. Mardi Gras carnival and parade is sponsored by Mortar Board, sen ior women's hat society, The jam session is sponsored by Chimes, junior women's hat society. Graduate Student Wins $lOOO Prize Eugene A. Mechtly, graduate assistant in physics from North ampton, has been awarded a $lOOO third-place prize in the nation wide Vanguard Satellite essay contest sponsored by the Martin Company of Baltimore. He also earned a comparable award of $lOOO for the University. The essay contest was inspired by Project Vanguard, the United States program to launch an arti ficial earth satellite for scientific research purposes. Houghton Will Address Education Convention Dr. Dorothy Houghton, assistant dean of the College of Home Eco nomics, -will address the home making session of the central dis trict 32nd annual convention of the State Education Association tomorrow at Lock Haven. - Ann D. Schultz, assistant pro fessor of home economics educa tion, will preside at the home making session. - - The theme for the convention is "Today's Education Is on the March." tRLs You know . wh a piece of copper jewelry can - do to sn up your fall outfits. - A large assor ent of beautiful pieces- by Gret,Barkin is now on display in the window of . . . The eria Offers d, Values , pleasant surroundings and an in- conomics cafeteria on the ground floor of the Home all these things plus reasonable The cafeteria consists of a recep tion room, two dining rooms and a kitchen. It is open from 11:50 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs day. Students in hotel and institu-; tion management classes plan,; prepare and serve the meals. The! students have different jobs each! 'week, such as manager, head 'waiter, cook or assistant cook. The only thing they do no,t do, ; lin preparing the meal is buy the: ;food. This is done by a professor, !in the hotel or institution manage-1 Iment curriculum. I 1 . Since students do all the work: in •preparing the meals, the cafe-! teria is not open when the Uni-1 versity has an official holiday. ' Lunch is served cafeteria-style." Two dining halls are open at !lunchtime: A typical main dish for! luncheon is vegetable soup with; ham salad sandwich, or beef stew.' A variety of :vegetables, salads! !and desserts is also served. There, t are homemade hot biscuits or, ! some other non-yeast bread and coffee, tea or milk. IDinner is served restaurant: style. Typical main dishes are ;breaded pork chop, beef stew ;or tuna and noodle casserole plus all I the trimmings. And the trimmings ; include an appetizer, two vege-' 'tables, a salad, a beverage, a des: !sell: and homemade rolls or bread. I If you don't want a full-course' meal you may order a plate meal which doesn't have .an appetizer, lor salad and which 'is fifteen (cents less than the regular meal. !Prices for the dinners range from 190 cents to $1.45. • Gras ov. 8 lat the es of ill be riday urday 'King e, all to the life iii ' Players Name 'Carnival' Cast The cast has been named for "The Carnival of Thieves," a far cical comedy to be presented by Players for six successive week ends beginning Oct. 18 at Centre 'Stage. The main characters, three good-natured pickpockets. will be played by Richard Mazza (Gus tave), John Ti:nmis (Hector) and I Joseph Servello (Peterbono). Fred Mayers is cast in the role of Dupont-Dufort ,Jr and Marvin Katz will be Dupont-Dufort Sr. , Gardner Tilison will play Edgar; Rosemary Keating, Eva; Chris tina Chesney, Juliette; Mary Min ' kiewich, Lady Hurl; William Bonham, town crier and June McCurdy, nursemaid. . Joseph Monaco is stage mana ger. The show is directed by Kel ly Yeaton. Journalism Instructor To Speak in . Chicago John D. Vairo, instructor in journalism, will address the Na tional Home Builders Corporation tomorrow at its Chicago confer ence. . Vairo, who teaches a public.re lations course, will discuss the im portance of maintaining good public relations. Blair Shop 142 S. Allen S. ,n't Fail to See It THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA —Daily Collegian Photo by Rob Lion, 'SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES'—Except the smoke in the eyes of these Air Force cadets isn't smoke. It's fertilizer being sprayed by University workmen to make the grass under the airmen's feet grow again. Matric Card Deadline i Schmidt Visits University Students who have not picked Dr. F. A. F. Schmidt, thermo up their identification and activity dynicist and head of the Instill. !cards may do so until 5 p.m. to for Thermodynamics and Internal !morrow in 4 Willard. i Combustion Engines in Aachen. The cards will be needed forl Germany, recently visited the the football game Saturday. I University. SMART SHOP THOROUGII : :1.; A skirt for shirts . . . meticulously tailored from double . kick pleat front to handsome leather belt. Brown, blue-grey, grey. Sizes 10 to 18. SKIRT Two Eng Grads Receive Prizes Two rnemllers of last year's graduatine c:ass were chosen '•.v Inners in the tenth annual en gineering undergraduate award a•rid scholarship design program sponsored by the James F. Lin coln Arc Welding Foundation, Cleveland. They are George Saire. an 'architecture student from Glass port, and Frank Strau&c, an archi tectural engineering student from Willow Grove. Saire received one of the fourth place awards of 575 for his com munity library design. Strauss re ceived a sixth place award of for his structure for a small com munity library. A similar competition for un dergraduates w ill be sponsored this year by the foundation. Through the Looking Glass with jan WE'RE HOME AGAIN Penn Weekend and pande monium are practically synon omous. Just wish we could have some more of that pande monium around. Don't let yourself settle back into the dufl routines of classes again, the cadets are going to _invade on Saturday for the first home game of the season. Why not make this a celebration too .. . Ethel has a full selection of flasks (with or without leather cases) or perhaps your taste runs in different channels. If so. perhaps new flannel bermu das would do the trick for the game. At any rate do stop in and browse. ALL ROPED IN As a perfect mate for the tweed bermudas Ethel has beautiful hemp belts. They're imported from Italy and wov en, like braids, or straight with antiqued leather and brass studs. They look perfect with any kind of sportswear in both men's and women's sizes. They start at just $3.95. TOO MUCH MAIL ?? Has the mail been piling up lately? No place to store it? Ethel has the answer to your problem. It's a coil wire coo koo bird that comb's in a var iety of colors including green, pink, shrimp, white and yel low. The bird has a feather tail, stands on two legs and has a woolen ball for a head. The unique feature about this particular bird is his beak. It's a ball point pen. All this for just $1.75. (ideal for gifts too!) FARAWAY PLACES . . . Is your beau off in some far away place? Does your girl live in Timbuctoo? Don't Figh and pine away. Love can conquer all distances, but to help it along why not send a Billet Doux (miss you card) from Ethel's. P.S. Have fun at the game! 112 E. COLLEGE AVE. PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers