TUESDAY, APRIL 2 44,000 (Continued from page one) booths was reported. The drizzle soon stopped and the shows con tinued. A spontaneous jam-session by the approximately 40 musicians at the carnival started around 11:30. After a few people had gathered at the Acacia and Al pha Delta Pi booth, the session was announced by the Spring Week Committee and the group swelled. The musicians later took to the march and paraded around the carnival grounds. The session ended about 11:50. Bright colors, just as in the float parade, highlighted the night. That, and sparkling shows, brought the student to many of the booths. Two booths had long lines out side most of the night. Because their show was so lengthy and there was still a long line near the end of the night, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha Sigma Phi (the Travels of Marco Polo) moved their show outside and gave a free performance. Flashing signs and elaborate fronts on some of the booths gave the midway a plush look. The Zodiac Club, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Alpha Omicron Pi, had a flashing sign and the signs of the Zodiac on the front. Many of the groups utilized pieces of their floats and regular carnival tents. Epstein said he and Juri Niiler, chairman of the week, would make spot checks on financial re ports today. He said they had not suspicions but were doing it be cause it is in the rules. The winners in each of the di visions—Greek and Roman, the Middle Ages and the 20th Cen tury—will be announced at Awards Night Wednesday. Tick ets for the event, starring Chris Connor and. the Kai Winding Sep tet, are available at the Hetzel Union desk. Co-Edits New officers of Sigma Delta Tau,sorority are Sondra Levitt, president; Lynn Oberman, second vice president; Paula Rossen, treasurer; Sandra Zeldin, record ing secretary; and Susanne Leitz, corresponding secretary. Initiates of Theta Phi Alpha sorority are Louise Franco, Sally Dunmire and Joanne Pangonis. Initiates of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity are Howard Holmes, Harold Cheatham, Ishmael John son, Marvin Hill, Charles Janer ette and Harold Warson. New officers of Alpha Xi Delia sorority are Dorothy Quer r y, president; Virginia Sankey, vice president; Lynne Melvin, corres ponding secretary; Miriam St. Clair, recording secretary; Jane Luddecke, rush chairman; Alice Roith, social chairman; Kay Rar ig, marshall; Linda Poorbaugh, treasurer; and Barbara Johnston, pledge trainer. New pledges of Chi Phi fra ternity are Michael Weinmayr, Richard James, Joel Holden, An thony Canike, Robert Jones, Fred erick Stothoff, David Irons, An drew Kasarda, Eugene Mariotti, Michael Pregmon Jr. and Thomas Stratton. Recent .initiates of Chi Phi frat ernity are Gary Best, David Stolp, Thomas Hoffner, Clifford Nichols, William McDougall and Philip George. New officers of Chi Phi frater nity are Peter Lucicie, president; James Molenari, vice president and social chairman; John Mor ton, secretary; Charles Edmunds, treasurer; John Buchart, pledge master; Andrew Schultz, rushing chairman; Bradley Davis, house manager; and Martin Bollinger, caterer. Hammond Beats Williams For AA Presidency Richard Hammond, junior in business administration from Wil mington, Del., has been elected president of the .ithletic Associa tion. Hammond defeated David Wil liams, junior in business adminis tration from Bradford, 754-529. Williams automatically became vice president because he was runner-up. Patrick Botula, junior in busi ness administration from Pitt s burgh was elected secretary, un opposed. IlLreceivetUll36 votes.. , 1959 Carnival Tickets Sold —Collegian Photo by Marty Scheer A RIGHT TO THE BODY The method of smash ing the Outing Club car is demonstrated by mem bers of the club in their Spring Week Carnival B ooth. The booth was a popular one throughout the evening; many people seemed to take out their p ent-up feelings on the car. Carnival Sidelights: Noise, Competition A carnival means noise—and in this respect the Spring Week Carnival Saturday night lived up to all expectations. Noise, color, screams and pleading barkers all made their appearance for five hours. And the barkers knew their business. They spared no expense; no line was too low if it drew part of the 12,000-person crowd into their booth. Had the barkers been an honest lot—not that they really lied—ev ery show on the midway would have closed almost be i ore it opened. One barker, in an effort to be different than the others, claim ed his show was the only one where the girls were complete ly dressed. No statistics ar e available on how well they did. Careful observation showed some people (mostly shor t f - change-men) standing in front of the same show for more than an hour. Every once in a while (us ually just after an attractive dance by a half-dozen coeds) their faces would drop, only to light up with the start of the next performance. For those with the means to go inside there were many surprises. Imagine the shock and disillusion ed feeling of those who have wor shiped Walt Disneyls Tinker Bell. How their faith must have been crushed to discover she was six feet tall and had hairy legs. And lovers of Tennessee Wil liams' "A Streetcar Named De sire" must have been despaired to discover Stella was in reali ty a 250-pound shrew whose only desire was to stop her hus band from going to college and 1 A11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111H11111111111111111111111111111111111111;11111111111111111111M 127 W. Beaver Ave. Call - AD 7-2342 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA By JEFF POLLACK becoming a fraternity man. One booth used as its outside attraction a student fire-swallow er and a champion baton twirler. It kept a large crowd outside the booth but did it help the ticket collection? Eng C to Get Vendors Soon The Engineering-Architecture Student Council has given $35 to Alpha Pi Mu, industrial engineer ing honorary fraternity, for in stallation of vending machines in Engineering C. According to James McLaugh lin, senior in industrial engineer ing from Montrose, and former corresponding secretary, profits from the machines will be placed in a loan fund which will be available to all students. Council also appropriated mon ey for printing souvenir Honors Day programs. Honors Day is part of the senior engineering lecture held near the end of the school term. George Bulman, instructor in electrical engineering; Lawrence Perez, assistant dean of the Col lege of Engineering and Archi tecture; and Robert Vierck, pro fessor of engineering mechanics, were nominated for the position if faculty adviser to the council. For Senior Bali Impress her with your thoughtfulness a: and delight her with Flowers for the big dance. Corsages RAO and up State College Floral Shoppe SGA, Budget (Continued from page one) ernment Association officers will each receive $250. The original budget presented to Cabinet last week was referred back to the finance committee upon the recommendation of Ju dy McFarland, former Women's Recreation Association president. Miss McFarland said she did not think compensations should be given for chairing or participat ing in an activity. Cabinet' members suggested that the committee try to imple ment an expense account for ac tivities instead of fixed compen sations, if the committee could not eliminate several of them. The total budget amount has been set at $23,000 which cor responds to the estimated in come for the year from student fees, Senior Ball, Junior Prom and Student Handbook. Along with the reduction in compensations, several increases have been made over last week's proposed budget. The increases are SGA Secretariat, $4OO instead of $365; Public Relations Commit tee, $lOO instead of $5O: and Class Night, $4OO instead of $l5O. In other business, the Assem bly will hear reports from the Cabinet Public Relations Com mittee, Library Expansion Com mittee and the Disaster Planning Committee. Nominations for the Rules Committee will also be made. PHOTO CONTEST For Pictures of Spring Week Carnival Ist PRIZE $25 certificate 2nd PRIZE—SIS certificate 3rd PRIZE—S.IO certificate Bring in your best Carnival picture ... WIN BIG MONEY gift certificates. Any size pic ture of any phase of the car nival . . . Our customers (in cluding YOU) will pick the winner.. HURR YI. ENTRY DEADLINE ... MAY 8 A t eatu Nugsi 106 W. Beaver Ave. State College PAGE SEVEN Orchestra To .Accompany Tree Tonight Michael Tree, young American violinist featured in the Univer sity Artist Series, will join the University Symphony Orchestra in two selections tonight Theodore K. Karhan, associate professor of music and music edu cation, will conduct the program, which will be held at 8:30 p.m. in Schwab. Student tickets are being dis tributed at the Hetzel Union desk, where non-student tickets are on sale. The orchestra will open the pro gram with the overture, "Russian and Ludmilla" by Michael Glinka, after which Tree will play with them in the Concerto No. 1 in G Minor by Max Bruch. Following the intermission, Tree will play with the orchestra, "In troduction and Rondo Capriccio so" by Camille Saint-Saens. The final number will be the orches tra's presentation of Johannes Brahms' Symphony No. 2, Opus 73 Words to Spare-- (Continued front page six) but it seems to me that much of this color is going by the boards. The University frowns on too many things now, and even without this official dis approval I guess studert have little time for much else than studying now. But no mat ter what the cause, imagination seems at a premium now, and the fun ap pears slowly to be draining out of college life. I hope the University doesn't pressure students of the future out of having fun, and I hope students don't get too lazy or placid to stop trying. I'd hate to see Penn - State become an educational factory--and that's what will happen if all the col or washes out. University Will Publish Philosophy Prof's nook "Philosophy and Argument" by Henry W. Johnstone, Jr., asso ciate professor of philosophy, will be published on May 1 by the Pennsylvania State Univer sity Press. In his book, Johnstone, who re gards argumentation as funda mental to philosophical inquiry, presents a study of the role of argumentation in philosophy and of the principles according to which the arguments of philoso phers may be evaluated. Everyone is asking All campus wants to know What is Silerrom? That's Right Silerrom is Morrell's spelled backwards Any idiot could have figured that out Any idiot can also enjoy Morrell's Tasty Sandwiches and Crisp Hot Pizza Come in and see for yourself MORRELL'S 112 S. Frazier Open till 12 p.m.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers