The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 07, 1958, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
John Hopkins Prof
To Talk on Chivalry
Dr. Sidney Painter, chairman of the department of history
at the Johns Hopkins University, will speak on "French
Chivalry" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in 121 Sparks.
Following this lecture, Dr. Douglas Bush, Gurney profes
sor of English Literature at Harvard University, will speak
on ''The Problem of Belief."
Bush's lecture will be co-spon
sored by the Committee on Reli
gious Education and the Liberal
Arts Lecture Series.
Painter is a specialist in the
history of England and France
In the 12th and 13th centuries
and is the author of many vol
umes on the Middle Ages.
Two of his major ' works are
"French Chivalry" and "The
Reign of King John."
Among his other books are
"William Marshall, The Scourge
of the Clergy," "Peter of Dreux,
Duke of Brittany," "History of the
English Feudal Barony," "The
Rise of the Feudal Monarchies,"
"Medieval Society," "The Past
That Lives Today," and "A His
tory of the Middle Ages."
Painter is a f a 11 o w of the
Medieval Academy of America
and a member of the editorial
board of "Speculum" and "Med
ievalia et Humanistics," learned
societies.
From 1950 to 1955, Painter
served on the Committee on Inter
national Exchange of Persons.
A graduate of Yale University,
Painter also received his doctor of
philosophy degree there. He has
served on the faculty of both Yale
and Johns Hopkins and since 1945
has been the chairman of the
Johns Hopkins history depart
ment.
'OB Class Sets,
2 Scholarships
Two $4OO scholarships will be
provided under the provisions of
a scholarship fund established by
the Class of 1908.
The scholarships have been es
tablished on the occasion of the
50th reunion of the class, which
will be held here as a part of the
Class Reunion and Alumni Insti
tute Program, June 12 to 14.
D. F. Evans, of Drexel Hill and
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., secretary of
the Class of 1908, said the scholar
ships will benefit freshmen. Each
of the students selected for an
award, however, may continue to
receive the award for each of his
four years if he continues to meet
scholastic requirements.
In making the awards, prefer
ence will be given to enrolling
freshmen who are descendants of
members of the Class of 1908, a
spokesman said.
Senate Acts--
(Continued from page one)
hall which terminated in destruc
tirn of property in the hall.
Original damage estimates of
$6B were changed after a complete
study of the damage done showed
it to be approximately $95. The
subcommittee's approval of the
recommendations is dependent on
the students paying the damage
costs.
One of the students receiving
suspended suspension had ap
peared before the judicial board
the week before the other three
students. At that time he accepted
all responsibility for the damage.
Blanks to Be Obtained
For Social Functions
ApplicatiOn blanks are available
at 102 Waring for organizations
which will be holding All-Univer
sity social functions.
The Senate sub-committee on
social affairs is to approve the so
cial calendar at its meeting on
May 15.
Petition forms must be returned
to 102 Waring by next Wedneiday.
Loooooooooooooooooooooooi
Radio Repair
Benqus Music Service i
111 East Beaver Avenue
Opposite the Post Office,
40000000000000000000000
Taylor to Speak
On 'Mass' Tonight
Mrs. Willa Taylor, director of
the Chapel Choir, will present a
commentary on Haydn's "St. Cae
ciliae Mass" at 8 p.m. tonight in
the rehearsal room of the Helen
Eakin Eisenhower Chapel.
This is the fourth program in
the current series of "Exploration
in Religion and the Arts," spon
sored by the Committee on Inter
religious Affairs.
+ CLASSIFIEDS +
ADS AIIIST BB IN BY 11:00 cre.
. THE PRECEDING DAY
RATES—I 7 words or leas:
$0.60 Ono Iniertlow
$0.75 Two Insertions
- 11.00 Three Insertions
Additional words 3 f0r.15 for each day
of Insertion
FOR SALE
VOLKSWAGON 19643 sedan, 6-weeks old
Call evenings AD 8-8723.
1960 PONTIAC hardtop sports cruiser
filth hydrarnatie drive—s2oo. Phone HO
6-6464.
SUPPLEMENT COMBO Orchestrations,
all new tunes; purchased for spring
weekend. First good offer. Call Bill AD 7-
3412.
WOMAN'S RALEIGH three speed English
bicycle in excellent condition. New tires
and tubes. Call AD 8.6616 sifter 6:30.
HEATH HI-FI Amplifier; moderriA-2
12W., Putih.pull ELB4's, Call Robert
(agouti ext. 291.
1-CARAT EMERALD-CUT Wiliam Mit-
mond engagement ring with bagettaa.
Appraised 61200.00; will sacrifice for
best offer over $400.00. Must see to ap
preciate. Call Dick ext. 2680.
DYNA-KIT MARK 111 and White Premnp.
Stephens 80 Fr in Rebel K 5. Reasonable.
It interested tall Tom AD 8-43161.
IBM DODGE, good condition—U26. Call
AD 7-2114 between 8 and 8 p.m.
GERMAN BICYCLE, 1969, about 90 miles;
all extras. excellent condition. Call
AD 7-7061. Price $22.
1949 CHEVROLET, very good mechanical
ly,
tires good. Call AD $-0314 after
IS :00 p.m.
CALL ABRAMSON'S auto wrecking AD
84237. Fine used cars and trucks for
salvage and resale.
FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED THIRD floor apartment,
3 1 i rooms, atone, refrigerator . Available
Tune Ist, rent $6. Call AD 8-9634 after
6 p.m.
ONE DOUBLE and one single room for
rent for Fall semeetm. After 1 p.m. call
AD i-43t6.
APARTMENT 2 ROOMS, furnished, litun-
dry Utilities. Available , for mummer. and
fall. Reduced rates. Apt. No. 4. 225 South
Atherton.
3-ROOM APARTMENT. furnished. Walk-
ing distance to campus. Available June
5 to September b. 160 per month. Call
AD 7-7957.
REDUCED RATES 13.60 to 6.00) couple
for all summed sessions at Marll,tn Hall,
317 E. Beater At enue. State College.
Penna. Reser.ationa being taken now. Dial
AD 8-6773.
MAKE YOUR boarding and rooming reser
vations for next yoar at Marilyn Hall.
317 M. Beaver ANC Agriculture. Chemistry.
Engineering 'and other students who are
interested in maintaining study hours pre.
fened. Call AD 8-6773 for additional in
formation.
3-ROOM UNFURNISHED private bath
apartment: single person or couple.
Mailable June 15. Call AD 84278 any
time.
MARRIED? Furnished apartment on Col
lege A.e. opposite Old Main. Available
June. Call AD 8-0743 after 7:90 p.m.
ROOMS FOR summer lesion at reduced
rates. Good location. Phone AD 8-8165.
AVAILABLE JUNE 1: Furnished three-
room apartment with bath. Convenient
location with parking. Grad students or
girls preferred. AD 8-0225 after 5:30.
LOST
UNI BRELCA OUTSIDE - 212 Ouncnd Satar-
day. Can not afford to buy * new one.
Call Dick ext. 3363.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Weintraub Edits
Novel by Shaw
Dr. Stanley Weintraub, instruc
tor in English literature, has con
tributed an introduction and notes
to the "Unfinished Novel," by
George Bernard Shaw, which is
being published in limited edi
tions for the first time in the
United States and England.
In his introduction, Weintraub
relates that Shaw rediscovered
the unfinished manuscript some
40 years after he stopped work
ing on it in 1888. Shaw added a
brief preface and sent the manu
script, with its present title, to
the National Library of Ireland
in 1946.
The subject of the novel is medi
cine. Shaw described it as "a com
plete throwback to the Victorian
novel with its triangle of husband,
wife and lover who reappear some
10 years later in my play, 'Can
dida.' "
A leading American Shavian,
Weintraub is editor of "The Shaw
Bulletin," journal of the Shaw
Society of America.
TAN RAINCOAT, green lining at Phi
- Kann Sunday. Name "Sane Kleinfeld"
on label. Call ext. 1174.
WHITE CASHMERE Sweater, lox collar,
kid gloves at Antoport Fri. night. Call
ext. 232. 1 have you'll. .
35 mm CAMERA—Thursday night in
Sparks or flee Hall. Call AD $-8441
*at. 3586. Reward.
ALL IS forghen. Please return men's
light raincoat, plaid lining taken from
Houck. Monday to HUB desk or phone
AD 8-1037. No qnestions. Badly needed.
PAIR OF thanes Sat. night at Phi Kappa
Tau. Call AD 7-2760.
PERSON TARING raincoat from Library
Circulation Room Saturday please call
Bob, ext. 3375. I have yours. ,
WATCH WITH expansion band, Ladles
Sportster Model Incabloe. Reward. Call
AD 7-2599.
EXTREMELY VALUABLE Camera in
vicinity, of Lyons Hall on April 18 ; WAS
in blue and sold box. Reward I Call Judy
ext. 1261 M. .
K&E SLIDE Rule with green ease in
Osmond or Willard. Call Len ext. 3204
if found.
HIGH SCHOOL Ring (1956). "United"
written on shield. Initials G.C.D. in
side. Call Mr. Kaushiah AD 8-0462.
WRISTWATCH—found Feb. in Rea Hall.
Owner contact Jim ext. 2877. Describe
watch and pay for ad.
• WANTED
WANTED: SIX Copies Loftily Collegian,
April 15. Rewird 25e. Put in B. Brack.
bill's Box with name and address.
YELLOWSTONE PARK—Riders wanted
to Yellowstone' Park or points between;
!caving June B. Call Joe Butterweck AD 8-
6682.
WANTED TO _buy'—English bicycle. Must
be in good condition and reasonably
priced. Call Fred AD 7.3044.
MOTEL MANAGER—IocaI motel inter
viewing for' summer, preferably grad
uate student and 'Wife. Must .be planning
to be here two years or more. Job con
sists_ of -office, work only, with apart
ment and all utilities furnished plus salary.
Entails working "air round• so .student
must be planning on attending summer
sessions. Call Al) 7-7782 for appointment.
INTERESTED IN getting married? Come
to the Annual Marriage Series May 7
and 8, 7:30 p.m., Chapel Lounge.
CLASSIFIED AD Staff meeting tonight—
Wednesday— at 7 p.m. in Collegian
Business Office.
KAPPA SIG would like to rent or borrow
bunko or cots for Mother's Day weekend.
Call AD 7.2044 ask for Inman.
HAVE CASH . . . will buy that late
model lightweight bicycle you've been
wanting to liquidate it attractively priced.
AD 134266.
OLD-FASHIONED lee Cream and Straw-
berry Social Wesley Foundation. Fri•
day, May 9th, '1:30 to 10. Price 35c. Enter
tainnient.
STORAGE STUDENT trucks end Personal
- affects. Pick-up and delivery service.
Shoemaker Bros. Phone Al) 8-6751.
ITS HASSINGEB . for racket stringing
the No-Awl way. Latest factory equip.
went, prompt service. guaranteed work.
Longer life to string and racket. University
rennis Service. 514 Beaver Ave. after
S p.m.
LOCAL REPAIR Service on all make* of
tvvevrtitere. We will, will for and deliver
tour typewriter. DMus Offiee Dquipmeat
&D 11412&
LOST
FOUND
MISCELLANEOUS
Free Chest X-Rays
To Be Available
Free chest x-rays will be avail
able to students, faculty and oth
er personnel of the University at
a mobile unit to be located near
the Ritenour Health Center at
Shortlidge and Pollock Roads,
today, tomorrow and Friday.
The unit is made available by
the Bureau /of Tuberculosis Con
trol, Pennsylvania Department of
Health, and will be in operation
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to
6 p.m.
It's 1230 miles from State Col
lege to Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
THE ENGINEERS HAVE HAIRY EARS
Today in this age of technology when engineering graduates are
wooed and courted by all of America's great industries, how do
you account for the fact that Rimbaud Sigafoos, who finished
at the very top of his class at RUT., turned down hundreds of
attractive job offers to accept employment as a machinery
wiper at the Acme Ice Company at a salary of $2O a week with
a twelve-hour day, a seven-day week, and only fifteen minutes
for lunch?
tree/Yid ofreis are vaz 1 t wiP "1
I know what you are thinking: "Cherches la femme!" You are
thinking that Mr. Acme, head of the Acme Ice Company, has
a beautiful daughter with whom Rimbaud is madly in love and
he took the job only to be near her.
Friends, you are wrong. It is true that Mr. Acme does have
a daughter, a large, torpid lass named Clavdia who spends all
her waking hours scooping marzipan out of a bucket and staring
at a television set which has not worked in some years. Rim
baud has not the slightest interest in Clavdia; nor, indeed, does
any other man, excepting possibly John Ringling North.
So how come Rimbaud keeps working for the Acme Ice Com
pany? Can it be that they provide him with free Marlboro
Cigarettes, and all day long he enjoys that filter, that flavor,
that flip-top box?
No, friends, no. Rimbaud is not allowed to smoke on the job,
and when he finishes his long, miserable day, he has to buy his
own Marlboros, even as you and 1, in order to enjoy that
estimable filter, that incomparable flavor, that crazy flip-top box.
Well, friends, you might as well give up because you'll never
in a million years guess why Rimbaud works for the Acme Ice
Company. The reason is simply this: Rimbaud is a seal!
He started as a performing Seal in vaudeville. One night on
the way to the Ed Sullivan show, he took the wrong subway.
All night the poor mammal rode the 8.M.T., seeking a helping
hand. Filmlly a kindly brakeman named Ernest Thompson
Sigafoos rescued the hapless Rimbaud. . . .. .
.
.
He took Rimbaud home and raised him as his own, and
Rimbaud, to show his appreciation, studied hard and-got ex
cellent marks and finished a distinguished academie career as
valedictorian of M.I.T.
Rimbaud never complained to his kindly foster father, but
through all those yeari of grammar school and high school and
College, he darn near died of the heat! A seal, you must remem
ber, is by nature a denizen of the Arctic, so you can imagine
how poor Rimbaud must have suffered in subtropical New York
and" Boston, especially in those tight Ivy League suits.
But today at the Acme Ice Company, Rimbaud has finally
found a temperature to his liking. He is very happy and Benda
greetings to his many friends.
Any time, any clime, you get a lot to like with a Marlboro,
whose makers take pleasure in bringing you this cotunin
through the school year.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 7. 1958
Spring Grid Drills--
(Continued from, page six)
Poe as promising backs.
"Chaffee and Poe , came out
for the team on their own," he
said, "but they look like good
prospects."
Engle hasn't named his
starting teams for Saturday's
annual Blue-White fracas at
Beaver Field, but the first two
backfields will probably line
up like this: Jacks (qb), Kas
perian (1h), Caye (rh) and Mo
conyi (fb) on one team and
Lucas (qb), Gilmore (1h), Kerr
(rh) and Botula (fb) on the
other.
with
MexS'holmari
he Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Bore "and,
"Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
r:•=3
O 1968 Mai Shulman