PAGE TWO Hubanna' 'Club Hula Dancers, A gala all-star student show will highlight the final Club Hubanna progrrn of the year tomorrow night in the Hetzel L'nion Ballroom. Mu' Ac will be promied from 9 p m. to midnight by the 18-piece AIM Band. The sho•h will start at 10 pm. and will feature Millicent L um. junior in education from, ;Honolulu, Hawaii, and Char!ene' Wong, senor in education from, Honolulu m a hula-hu:a dance. ; Other performers for the show will be Ann Penner, a rhy thm-and-blues singer, a singing group from Pi Beta Phi sorority and the coed dancers from the Association of Ind e p en de n t Men-Leonides carnival show. Cabinet To root Cost OfHandbook All-I;ri.7ersity Cabinet voted, la,t night to pay all loi , ie3 in-, cur - P(1 by the Studrii.nt Handbook , Th=> trritir,n =tated that Cab inet any irriproYe rnenti the Handbook editor v;oulti rr.aki ^J. nit h wo , :ld .r.rrea=.o Hand- 'Other features of Club Hub- • 1,e) , ,, k r: xoP r -..0 river ar.d above anna will be a grass-skirted ad verll , lng rf:turnq , photographer with a Poleroid Basically the motion was a 1 camera. Pictures will be sold "paper vol e" of confidence I for 25 cents. since Cabinet in effect already I Refreshments will be available, subsidizes the Book with a ; throwgh table service or buffet. i S2OOO appropriation, on which i Weather permitting tables will: 51500 is expected back in ad- ibe set up on the terraL' and danc-• vertisina returns. and has in ling Ticket s for Club Hubanna are will be permitted. the past footed the bill for any additional costs. I Cabinet defeated an earlier mo-' available at the HUB desk and Lion made by Robert Franklin,' cost $1.25 per couple. If any Collegian editor, to completely; tickets remain they will be subsolire the Handbook. , available at the ballroom tomor- Bryna Nelon. Handbook edi,- ; row evening. Charles Bartholeme , .v, chairman tor, said ~ he would not know the' exact amount of money that wil l of Club Hubanna, said yesterday' be needed to pay for improve-!that parents are encouraged to at-, Inent , , on the book until the bill, tend. 1 is received from the printer. Af-,1 Club Hubanna was instituted; ter repeated questioning she esti) this year on a trial basis to pro-1 mat , d the excess expense would vide increased social facilities for: be "very roughly about $O4OO to:students. The first club proved a $500" 'large success. i Miss Nelson also mentioned I three-fourths of the religious ! section, part of the administra tion section and art work would 1 have to be cut from the book under the present allotment of il funds.i Robert Piccone, Handbook busi ne,-,; manager, said this year for! the first tune the committee is' soliciting national advertising ; which could make up the deficit,. but contracts may not be secured: In time for this year's issue. lonosphere Lab Receives Army Grant The Army Ballistic Missile Agency has provided the lon osphere Research Laboratory on campus with an 18-month grant of $150,000 to build in struments to enable Army rockets to give important information about the ion osphere. Ground-based instruments are also being built at the labora tory's field station and will be used at the Air Force Missile Testing Station at Cape Cana veral, Fla. They will be housed in a large military hock. A large radio antenna, about 1000 feet long be erected on a site in Florida. It is expected that this equipment will be ready for use next summer. Plans have been made to use Iwo radio signals, one on a very high frequency of 40 mega cycles, practically unaffected by the ionosphere, the other, a much lower frequency, 400 EUROPE BOUND on a BUDGET? Then the new, pocket-sized manual "Europe for the Penny- Wise" is for you! Within the covers of this handy booklet you will step-by-step be told HOW to vacation in Europe at the lowest possible prices. For example, some of the topics in cluded are: Inexpensive accom modations and res t a u r ants. Useful phrases in 6 languages . Why, it even tells you how to earn your trip. Send for your copy NOW, by mailing $1 to: Box 14. Madison Square Sta tion, New York 10, New York. Have Singing The dancers will perform a modern dance entitled, 'Savage Rhythm." Master of Ceremonies for the evening will be Bob Martin, WM- , AJ announcer. Approved Fraternities All fraternities have been ap proved for tonight and tomor row night for entertaining wo men guests except Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Tau Omega, Kap pa Alpha Psi, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Lambda Phi and Pi Sigma Upsi lon. kilocycles, will be strongly affected by the ionosphere. By comparison of the velocities of propagation of these two signals going from the ground to the rocket, scientists can de termine exactly what the elec tron density is in the vicinity of the rocket. The date is tele metered from the rocket to recording equipment on the ground. The rocket instri:ments must be "ruggedized" to withstand the extremely high temperatures and acute vibration conditions which it will encounter. All the equip ment will be subjected to exten sive temperature and vibration tests before it is placed in the rockets and missiles. According to Dr. Sidney A. Bowhill, assistant professor of electrical engineering who is in charge of the project, scientists are particularly interested in de- PLAYERS present at SCHWAB AUDITORIUM Evenings Only The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare 8 p.m. MAY 8,9, 10 Tickets at HUB or door Thursday 'lsc Fri. and Sat. $1.25 • THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Poetry Prize Awarded To Robinson I Seven Workshops have been set up for Student Encamp ment. to be held Sept. 3 to 6 at the Mont Alto Forestry School. I Matthew Robinson, senior arts and letters from Philadelphia, The workshops and their chairmen are: Present Problems has been awarded the Samuel! Of Student Government, Charles Bartholomew; Subsidiary Barsky Memorial Award of $25 l Organizations of Student Government, Samuel Fleming; for h:s poems submitted to the iStudent Government and Its Or-i Poetry Workshop. Iganization, John Bott. Some of his work will appears Judicial System, Mary Ann in the eighth annual edition of Ju - emmill; Recreation and Student tne Poetry Workshop's publiai-; goes on s al..Welfare, David Fineman; Com- I ,tion, Pivot, which Monday and Tue-day at the mallimunications, Gary Young; and ibuiletin board, the HUB and thelCulture and Academic Affairs, Corner Room. _ - _- _ The Barsky A- t Louis Phillips. ' About 90 students and 30 fac ward is present ed in honor of ulty and administration mem the Ia t e Samuel : bens will attend Encampment. arsky of Los . Nearly 150 students have intex- Angeles, Califon- IN, . , k -.„ viewed for the 20 places re m w .a, ho was in- _ tterted in the s' ° 'rserved for students who do not Workshop. Rob- , - : -':.-; AK w automatically go by position. inson has been a', - - .- . Results of the interviews will be :memberof the' • *.,-- ' •--: announced next week, Encamp this/.rhop and is !' . - ' _ , ment Chairman Eugene Curry year's editor i of Pivot. Robinson i said. Pivot is issued yearly by the! The workshop on student gov ,Workshop and contains poems by ,ernment problems will discuss members of the Workshop and `such topic s as effects of night ;other students, faculty and staff, classes on activities, integration members. This year there is a spe-, :cial preface by its adviser, Joseph with the University centers, corn iGrucci. explaining the aims and 'pensations, and student politics. objectives of the Workshop. Pivot; The subsidiary org a n izations has gained distinction in its field!workshop will discuss moving for the excellence of its poems-!Greek Week to the fall semester, It is unusual in that it is self- class advisory boards, the purpose sustaining. Circulation is now over of the Cabinet Personnel Inter -1000 copies per issue. 'viewing Committee and the Inter ;College Council Board, and Spring Week. Free Chest X-Rays iWill End Today Today is the last day that the mobile X-ray unit will be located on campus for making free chest IX-rays. Dr. Herbert R. Glenn, Univer sity physician, said the unit has been brought to campus primar ily as a service to graduating sen iors who may need chest X-rays before accepting employment but that all members of the faculty, :staff and students should utilize it. The unit will be in operation from 9 a m. to 1 p m. and from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the r•orner of Pollock and Shortlidge Roads. termining the electron density of the ionosphere and new develop ments in rocketry have made it possible to probe the upper at mosphere to heights exceeding 500 miles. "An accurate knowledge of electron densities is important for framing physical theories about the ionosphere and the solar radiations which caused the ionization of the upper at mosphere," he explained. From a practical standpoint, he pointed out, this knowledge is needed to estimate the accuracy of missile and satellite tracking systems because the ionization causes errs in radio tracking. Dr. Bowhill and his colleagues, four graduate students and 15 part-time technicians, are now studying experimental records from the first Jupiter-C rocket [ flight and are analyzing them to 'get ionization density data. 1 7 Workshop Groups Set for Encampment Reorganizing Ali - University Cabinet will be the main topic of the workshop on student gov ernment organization. The group also will construct an or ganizational chart of campus activities. The workshop on judicial sys tem will discuss setting up a new judicial system and the limits to student and administration juris diction. Topics of the recreation and ,student welfare workshop will be the Hetzel Union Building expan ision, Stone Valley, entertainment 'rfacilities for freshmen, religious 'activities, Club TIM and Club Hubanna and big weekends. ' The communications workshop will discuss a reevaluation of the freshman handbc;ok, a stu dent AM radio station, how The Daily Collegian and student government can work effective ly together, "Who's in the News at Penn State," the Central Pro motions Agency, and interesting the average student in campus issues. Included in the topics for the culture and academic affairs workshop are an expansion of the Fitzpatrick Named Head Of Penn State Thespians Officers of the Penn State Thes pians were elected Sunday. ' They are Thomas Fitzpatrick, president; Sylvia Guyer, vice president; Rosalie Samley, secre tary; Ronald Kolb, treasurer; and Kenneth Todd, member-at-large. FRIDAY. MAY 9, 1958 general education system, aca demic honesty, exemption from final examinations, publicizing the University's art festival, the new lecture series, required averages for participation in student organ izations and branch libraries at living units. hI~TATE NOW real. 1:46, 3:43, 5:40, 7:37, 9:33 _ . . . . V r li,,-. 0 104: ANTHONY QUINN .: pr'-'S ; , : SOPH IA I.OREN . Pk . .Attila - axe. - --...- 00000000000000000000000 CATHAIJM Now . 12:25, 3:19, 6:13, 9:10 23. imam MARtON )Aoiarqonnny. BRANDO . - CLIFT DEAN 'h® dung Liana 000000000000000000000000 * NITTANY NOW - DOORS OPEN 6105 Laff and Roar with The Bowery Boys "UP IN SMOKE" 000000 000000000000000000 * STARLITE * DRIVE-IN MIDWAY BETWEEN STATE COLLEGE & BELLEFONTE SHOWTIME 8:40 FRIDAY WILD IS THE WIND ANNA MAGNANI -AND ANTHONY QUINN DEVIL'S HAIRPIN Technicolor • Vistarislon CORNELL WILDE -AND JEAN WALLACE • PLUS CARTOON • ••........ 00000 ......... 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