The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 03, 1959, Image 2

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    PAGE IV/0
Culvert to Mark
Start of Dam
A culvei t along the bed of Shaver Creek will be the
first step in the construction of the Stone Valley Recreation
area dam, according to Lawrence Perez, assistant dean of
engineering and architecture.
The culvert must be built
Girls May File
Hall Preference
April 6 to 17
All woman who have not ap
plied for eassigment to their
present 10010 and have not been
assigned to a sorority suite may
submit room piaci - once apulien-
I ions from next Monday until
April 17
Ilopeiclns: halls for next year
will he McKee, McElwain, Sim
mons, Atherton, Haller, Cooper,
Cross and Hibbs. Room prefer
ences should he designated on
housing contracts and roommate
requests submitted together.
Contracts for residents of Sim
mons, McElwain and Atherton
Halk will he available Monday
at the receptionist desk Women
now in Haller. Hibbs, Cooper and
Cross can pick up contracts at
the Redifer post office, and stu
dents living in Grange and Mc-
Allister (-in get contracts in Grad
uate Hall.
Contracts are also available. at
the Assignment Division, 1-A Ir
vin
They should be returned to 1-A
Irvin in person or by mad by-
Apt it 17 to be included in the
drawing for waiting list numbers.
e p r e sentatives of Women's
Student Government Association
will conduct the drawing. Stu
dents will then be notified of
their assignment A $lO room de
poqit must be paid within 10 days
after the date typed on the no
tice
SSS Forms to Be Sent
To Boards on Request
Freshmen and sophomores who
desue to have SSS Form 109, aP
plicationc for draft deferments,
sent to their local boards this
June must request this at the
Ileatstrar's office, 4 Willard, by
May 13.
Moon Beams Will Guide Spacemen
By JIM WHALEN
Space navigatois approaching
the moon for a landing are in for
a ioy ride if they can't calculate
then• poNition with the various
phases of the moon's illumination
--e,necially if the moon is full.
That xvas the warning given
by Dr Gerard Kniner. director of
the Yet ices and McDonald Obser
vatorie,; in Williams Bay, Wis,
and Foil Davis, Tex , who spoke
heie List night.
The anueßrance of the moon k
quite dlfferent with each phase of
Illumination and the full moon
offels; the greatest difficulty in
in'erpret ing a moon feature, Kui
per said.
Kuiper also warned against
the use of an artist's interpre
tation of moon features in get
ting an accurate oicture of what
the moon looks like.
"Whenever you Ef o beyond the
use of photogranhs," he said, "you
get into the realm of speculation "
lcutper spoke In 121 Sparks
last meht on "Surface Features
of the Moon." His talk was spon
sored by the Graduate Sehool
Lecture Series and the Depart
ment of Physics
Kuiper emphasized the impor
tance of studying the moon in
relation to the. earth. He said un
derstanding the relationship of
the two bodies is an important
For Expert Tailoring
See C. W, HARDY, Tailor
222 W. Beaver Avenue
By TOM EGGLER
i irst so the water from Shaver
Creek will not interfere with con
struction of the dam, Perez ex
plained.
The spillway for the dam will
be built about the same time
the culvert is being constructed
as it will be on one side of the
darn and its construction will
not be hampered by water from
the creek.
After completion of the culvert'
a strip beneath the center of thel
dam will be dug down to bedrock
so that construction of the core of
the' dam can be started.
This core must be constructed
from an impermeable material to
nrevent water from seeping
throurth the dam. Perez said that
the core of the dam will be made
from .1 very fine clay that will'
nie , •mnt anv seepage.
After this core has been built.
workmen will 'one dirt against
each side of it forming the main
of 'ha dam. A stone face will
he laid on the lake side of the
dam so that waves on the lake
will not wear at the dirt. This
sums. face will ao from the top
of the dam to about eight feet
Is"low the surface.
The too of the dam will stand
labout 10 feet above the normal
water level for protection against
I flash floods. The average denth of
!the dam will be about 17 feet
with a maximum depth of 30
feet.
Perez also said that help is
n^nAnci to nick no the area that
will be under water. He said that
debris left in the area will only
tile water dirty for a lone
time after the dam is completed.
He Pxpressed hope that this help
might strive with the coming of
Greek Week.
Pittman to Give Lecture
On Picasso, Chardin
"Picasso----Chardin„.k Compari
son" will be the subject of a lec
ture by Hobson Pittman at 8 to-
Mat in the Mineral Science Audi
torium
The lecture will be presented
as a part of the opening of an
exhibition of paintings by Pitt
man. The exhibition will continue
until May 5 in the Hetzel Union
Building.
phase of work of the geophysicist
.n interpreting the history of the
earth and the solar system.
With the use of slides, Kuiper
explained the origin of various
moon features such as "lava
blisters," "sea basins," dead vol
canoes and mountain ridges.
Because of the absence of ero
sion, ex cep t heat erosion, the
moon is a fossil record of some
5 billion years.
Kuiper said that at the time
the moon was formed there was
. 1 period of tremendous internal
heat The steam that escaped and
the heat on the surface gave the
moon at that time a brittle sur
face. Many craters were formed
on this surface.
The slope of the craters indi
cate that they were formed by
Unmet rather than gathered de
bris.
He said a bulldozer that low
ered the walls of a crater into
the center would be merely re
placing an canal mass that had
been displaced.
Kuiper said he has found no
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HOTEL STATE COLLEGE
THE CORNER •
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
University
Publishes
Prof's Book
A collection of poems, "Mosaic
and Other Poems," by Dr. Fred
eric Will, has become the second
book published by the University
Press.
Will is assistant professor of
classical languages at the Uni
versity.
In this latest collection Will
has drawn from the techniques
of modern poetry only what he
considered essential to express
his own experiences. The result
is described as "romantic poetry
adapted.to the emotional climate
of the 20th century, poetry that
avoids any sentiment which might
hide its object, at the same time
remaining faithful 'to the emo
, tional reality of life."
He is the author of "Intelligible
!Beauty in Aesthetic Thought"
land of numerous articles and
'poems. At present, he is writing
a book on modern Greece.
Born in 1928 in Connecticut,
'Will spent his youth in Illinois,
Arizona and Indiana. He was
graduated from Andover Prepara
tory School and Indiana Univer
, sity and completed work for his
doctorate in comparative litera
ture at Yale University.
The recipient of two Fulbright
grants, he has studied in both
Greece and Germany, has taught
at Dartmouth and at present
! teaches Greek and Latin at the
!University.
Speaker to Cite
Scientists' Duty
Dr. Victor Paschkis, director of
the Heat Flow Laboratory at Co
lumbia University, will speak atl
8 tonight on the question, "Is
the Scientist Responsible for the
Consequences of His Work?"
The lecture, which will be held
in the Hetzel Union assembly
hall, is part of a nationwide tour
!sponsored by the Society for So
cial Responsibility in Science.
During the tour, Paschkis is
traveling about the country en
gaging scientists in a discussion
'of their responsibility for the so
cial and ethical implications of
;their work.
During the past summer Pasch
kis conducted a similar tour in
Europe.
The lecture is sponsored locally
by the Committee on Interreli
gious Affairs and the State Col
lege Friends Meeting.
evidence to uphold the findings
of a Soviet scientist that there
was an eruption of the moon.
He said that calculations have
shown about 100,000 craters on
the moon and that every 50,000
years a new one appears.
* *
Society, Jazz, Latin,
Rock 'n' Roil
MUSIC
Designed for Dancing
The SHERRY LEE COMBO
VOCAL and INSTRUMENTAL
TRIO or QUARTET
for Any Occasion
For Rates and Open Dam
Write: J. Bretton
2315 Maple Ave., Altoona, Pa.
or Call Collect
Altoona -- Wlndsor 4-3367
Safety Division Staff
To Inspect Buildings
The University's safety division is in the midst of con
ducting routine inspections of all campus buildings, Elwood
F. Olver, director of the Department of Security, said
yesterday.
Members of the safety division staff are inspecting build-
ings for general good housekeep
ing practices. They are checking
for rubbish, inflammable waste
and other combustible items
which may be stored in the build
ings, Olver said.
As another precautionary
measure, fire doors in the build
ings will hereafter remain
closed to provide the protection
for which they were designed.
Various devices used in the past
to hold the doors open will be
removed.
University employees have
been instructed to see that the
doors remain closed.
The fire doors are now being
held open by a chain. One of the
links of this chain is made of
solder and when it is heated it
will break and the door will close.
Firedoors in public buildings are
used to reduce the effects of
drafts in the stairwells and there
by provide a safe exit for occu
pants of the building.
Three departments—the De
partment of Security, the De
partment of Construction and
Planning and the Department
of Maintenance and Utilities,
made the ruling at a meeting
Wednesday. The new measure
is in line with the Pennsylvania
Department of Labor and In
dustry's current fire hazard in
-1 spection of school buildings.
More than 60 persons concerned
with the safety work at the Uni
versity attended a safety confer
fence held Wednesday night. The
Imo®vamommeni
,v4r.
.
- Atherfon St. _ ,ai
State Colleges • , • •
. •
OPEN 5 'Ta. 9. P.M. DAILY;
SUNDAiS; . 12. "lii 8 P.M.
CLOSED 'MONDAYS
RE.SERVATIONS- CAtI 8-0082
Feat. 1:59, 4:31, 7:03, 9:35
*CATHAUM
Now - 1:30. 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30
30,3,C -
4.
MONEY Htesigui. ANTHONY PERKINS,
GREEN MANSIONS
- - LEE J COBB'
COMING SOON
John Wayne -- Dean Martin
Ricky Nelson - "Rio Bravo"
*NITTANY
Today - Doors Open 6p.m.
Sat. - Doors Open 1:30 p.m.
BRIGETTE BARDOT
"GIRL IN THE BIKINI"
FRIDAY. APRIL 3, 1959
program included a discussion on
"Our Safety Philosophy" by Al
bert E. Diem, vice president for
business administration, and an
address on "What's New in Safe
ty," by Amos E. Neyhart, admin
istrative head of the Institute of
Public Safety.
Wimer to Open
Marriage Talks
William Wimer, of the Depart
ment of Family Life of the United
Church of Christ, will present the
first in a 'series of three lectures
on preparation for marriage at
8:30 tonight in the Helen Eakin
Eisenhower Chapel lounge.
Wimer's topic will be "Is Love
Enough?" After his talk discus
sions will be held in six smaller
groups led by faculty members
and ministers.
The remaining lectures are
, scheduled for the following two
Fridays. The Rev. Richard Batch
elder, of the,Young Men's Chris
tian Society at Carnegie Institute
of Technology, will speak on
'"What Is a Man's Place in the
Home?" on April 10.
FOR GOOD RESULTS
USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS
EUROPE
Dublin to the Iron Curtain; Africa
to Sweden. You're serempenled net
herded around. College age only Also
short trips. 2724 21390.
EUROPE SUMMER TOURS
25S Sequoia (Doe C) Pasadena, Calif.
••••61110011 000000000 IOW11••4?
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