PAGE EIGHT Outing Enthusiasts Ignore Bad Weather Last weekend 40 members of to expand its activities to include; the Outing Club attended an over-jhiking and skating at Whipple’sj night cabin party at the Civil En- and the Duck Pond. I gineenng cabin despite rain, fog| In 1954 the Penn State Outing] and the threat of snow. (Club was chartered with Richard; Such a large turnout under, Wohl as its first president. The| rather adverse weather condi-!75-100 members divided them-, tions typifies the year ’round ac- selves into thiee divisions—field I tivities of the gioup. ;and stream, cabin and trails and! Founded in 1936 as the Penn. win^ei ' spoits. I State Ski Club, the Outing Club After being chartered, the club’ lias grown through the years to'expanded and grew rapidly. In; include a membership of 0ver!1955, 12 members went by canoe! 1000 people participating in a var-jtp Algonquin Park in Canada.] lety ot sports. i By 1956 the membership had' Dr. Max Dereum, associate pro-1 grown to 400.T0 meet the varied lessor of forestry, founded thejinterests of such a large member club and helped to set up its ini-'ship, turkey shoots, skating par tial activities—a ski school, skijlies and cabin parties were added meets, ski trips and a hospital forito the list of activities, injuied skiers. I A 1950-foot rope low was In 1942 the name was changed ! added in 1957 and the member lo the Penns Valley Ski Club. j ship had risen to 500. That same By this time a cross-country ski I year the winter sports division meet from Bald Eagle Mountain 1 split into skating and skiing, to Boalsburg had become an an- I Now with a membership of over nual event. The club also set up 1000 the Outing Club is still grow ski trails and erected an 800- ,ing. The future may see the pre foot rope tow. 'sent six divisions increase with Two years later the club began the growing student body. - y ■himp^ pP^ I '*' s., / '' k v . I IBM invites the 1959 Graduate with Bachelor's or Master’s Degree to discuss career opportunities Contact your college placement office for an appointment for campus interviews &! ....... ¥ Some facts about IBM IBM’s phenomenal growth offers unlimited professional opportunities to highly qualified graduates. Company policies lay a firm groundwork for stimulating and rewarding careers in the areas listed above. At IBM, you will find respect for the individual... small-team operations... early recognition of merit... good financial reward ... outstanding company-paid benefits ... and many educational and training programs. IBM’s laboratories and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott, Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie, Yorktown, N.Y.; Burlington, Vt.; San Jose, Calif.; Lexington, Ky.; and Rochester, Minn. Sales and service offices are located in 198 principal cities throughout the United States. If you cannot attend the interviews, write or call the manager of the nearest IBM office: IBM Corp. 206 Main Street Johnitown, Pa. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Career opportunities Safes Liberal Arts • Business • Accounting Engineering • Mathematics Applied Science Physics • Mathematics • Engineering Product Development Physics • Mechanical • Electrical • Engineering Physics • Mathematics Manufacturing, Industrial • Electrical • Mechanical • Mathematics • Physics Research Physics • Mechanical • Engineering Physics • Mathematics DATA PROCESSING • ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS • MILITARY PRODUCTS SPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTS • SUPPLIES • TIME KOUIPUENT Weissburger to Lecture About Art of El Greco Dr. Herbert Weissburger, cura tor of decorative arts at Carnegie Institute, will speak at 8 p.m. Fri day, in the Hetzel Union assembly room. His subject will be: ‘‘The Age and Art of El Greco.” ! The lecture, sponsored jointly jby the Departments of Art and | Romance Languages, will be open | to the public. | Following the lecture, a recep tion for all interested faculty and I students will be held in the HUB ! lounge. jAngei Flight Workshop jWiil Begin Next Week The fifth annual Blue Yonder Workshop, sponsored by Angel .Flight, will begin its 6-week pro jgram next Wednesday, i The workshop is designed to Igive the prospective Air Force wife information as to her role as hostess and household manager. The workshop will meet at 7 p.m. on Wednesdays in 203 Wil lard. Registration blanks are available at the Hetzel Union 1 desk. The University’s first agricul tural information bulletin was published one hundred years ago. MARCH 4, 5 & 6 Hall of Fame. He was elected as a coach along with Hugo Bezdek and »Dick Harlow in 1954. The only Penn State grid player to gain Hall of Fame accolades, thus far, is Pete Mauthe, the all-time Lion scoring leader. Wrestling coach Charlie Speidel, the deacon of. Lion coaches with 29 years of service, is also a hall of fame member —the Helms Foundation wrestling honorary. As to team records, Penn State teams have been winning at a belter than .600 clip since that initial baseball experiment. Un official records show that the Lions have won ,645 per cent of their games, excluding ties. All told, Penn State teams have won 3154, lost 1887 and tied 132 through and including the past fall cam paigns. This figure includes the combined won-lost-tie records of 13 sports—three of which have been discontinued—boxing (1919-1954), fencing (1934-1951) and swimming (1936-1951). Soccer has the best team winning percentage—.Bso on a 231-42-43 record—followed by wrestling—. Boo on 245 wins, 62 losses and 13 ties. Golf (.740), basketball (.705), cross-country (.700), baseball (.680), track (.670) and gymnastics (.650) are next. In fact, the only losing sport currently in active play is lacrosse with a .430 winning percentage—l3B wins, 183 losses and five ties. So there’s our capsule rundown of Penn State’s sports. It's been a highly-successful 100 years. Maybe it will be even more successful over the next century. If your degree major is in: WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1959 SPORTSEER (Continued from page six) cTassTfTed HMIIIIIMIIItMIkIMIHIIIIIHMIIIMMIIMIMIIIMItMIII ADS MUST BE IN BY 111«0 A.M. THE PRECEDING DAT RATES CASH—I 7 words or !••■ CHARGE—I 2 words or lets $.51 on* Insertion . 1.75 two Insertion* 91.11 thre* Insertion* Addition*! words—3 for 9.91 for «*eh day of insertion FOR SALE LIGHTWEIGHT 12 geuge Browning 5 .hut automatic-lamed rib—one teaaon o! E * rt «n raincoats switched Nanc? exl. BRO Ur