SATURDAY. OCTOBER JO. 1959 —Collegian Photo by Rick Bower HEE HAW—The local version of the Army mule appears quite bored at the antics of its keeper Frank Pearson at yesterday morning’s spontaneous pep v rally. Students, band and cheer leaders were quite enthusiastic in giving the football team a big sendoff to West Point. Leonides Council Members Elected New representatives t o Leonides Council for 1959-60 were elected Wednesday night. '1 lie now representatives and their alter nate-. ini*: McKee: Unit 1, Patricia Penny jui'xit and Mary Lou Fres: Unit 2, Marla , il./Kc and Premia Spottn; Thompson; Unit 1. SiNtn Reid and Uowcr.u Rotcop; i Unit 2. It ml Wein and Helen Levine; limit 3, iie.erly Cades and lada Zukowsky; Unit 4, Kli/hlicih Pan and Sue Zenglc, \theiton* Unit L Judith Frederick and Amleiaon; Unit 2, Edith Young junt .To Ann Ta>lor; Unit 3. Anne Parley h'i--S.->IH«TO«'ST-. .. ” 5.)Q 9 f.M :• '• ‘ OUTING (LOB The Rock Climbing Civ. will hit the trail Sunday at 10 A.M. from behind Osmond. will be Monday at 7 p.m. in 203 HUB. Appointments have been made by Carol Frank, Leonides pi evident: Mary Ann Clanter, vice president replacing Daunna Dpebler who is student teaching; Margaiet Orchard, Leonides chairman for Home conntig; and Sonja Brown, Cultural As pects Chairman. Elections co-chairmen are Anne Earley and Susan Borchers. BEAT ARMY HERE NOW ARE ISleis SUPERLATIVE . NEW CHEVROLETS FOR 1960! Nearest to perfection a low-priced car ever camel ftp MttrWhMtnf—Hi* ota*ft Sfort &mv SfeOW—Sunday* NSC-TV—Pnt Boon* Chevy Showroom—Weekly ABC-TV—R«d Sktltcn Chevy Special Friday. October 9. CBS-TV. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Mule f Band Students Give Team Sendoff Some 150 cheering students, a makeshift band and a distant relative of the Army mule joined to give the Nittany Lion football team a noisy sendoff to West Point early yesterday. Students chanted "State, State, State” under direction of the cheerleaders in front of Recrea tion Hall. While the team was boarding; the bus, Coach Rip Engle told the! crowd, "These boys are going to go out there and give you every thing they’ve got.” The mule, draped with a blan ket bearing a large “A”; the Air Force Band members, cheerlead ers and students marched in front of the bus as it proceeded down Burrowes Rd. The bus took the players to Black Moshannon Airport. The team then flew to Stewart Air Force Base, Newburgh, N.Y. Following the game, the team will return by plane and bus, and .will arrive in State College at about 9 p.m. tonight. 'Book' Ticket Sale Set for Monday Tickets for the Thespian pro duction, "It’s in the Book,” will go on sale at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Hetzel Union desk. Tickets for Thursday evening performance are $1.25 and tickets for Friday and Saturday are $1 50. All three performances will be gin at 8 p.m. in Schwab Audi torium. “It’s in the Book" is an original musical written by Ivan Ladizin sky, senior in arts from State College. Code Class to Be Held Penn State Amateur Radio Club will hold its first code class at 7 p.m. Monday In 219 Electri cal Engineering. HEc College Nickel Days ■ Students and faculty in the College of Home Economics will be asked to dig into their pockelbooks for a nickel during a Nickel Days drive Tuesday and Wednesday. The money will be used to pay for a pigeon hole mail system for the college. The drive is sponsored by the college’s student-faculty board. The plan was recommend-; ed by students who felt a mail system should be installed to eli iminale postage cost for intercol jlegiate mail. The boxes are also designed to speed up transmission of mail in the college. Students outside of the Col lege of Home Economics may also leave notes in the boxes for friends who are home eco nomics majors and for the fac ulty. “If each student and professor drops a nickel in the containers, we will have enough money to build the boxes,” explained Mrs. Barbara Anderson, coordinator of student affairs for the college The containers will be placed in the front hall of Home Economics Building Tuesday through Thurs day The mail boxes will be locat ed in the back entrance of the present home economics build ing. There will be 40 pigeon holes labeled alphabetically for students, faculty and the nine | Campus Party Clique Meeting | | Sunday, Oct. 11th | | 7 P.M. 10 Sparks | | Opportunity for party positions | n «« I Freshmen Welcome I = ' TimmmmimnmimiiiiiumiimiiiiimiiiimnmuiummiimiiiiHiiiiiiiimn 4 IMPALAS—AII the car you ever yearned for! Each embodies dis tinctive treatment inside and out, with triple-unit rear lights, fingertip door releases and safety-reflector armrests. Impala sport sedan above. 4 BEL AlRS—Priced just above Chevy’s thriftiest models! Like all Chevies, they give you the famed Hi-Thrift 6 or a new Economy Turbo-Fire V 8 as standard equipment. 4-door Bel Air sedan above. 3 BISCAYNES-These (honest to gosh) are the lowest priced of the '6O Chevrolets. They bring you the same basic beauty and relaxing roominess as the other models. 4-door Biscayne sedan above. 5 STATION WAGONS—Styled to carry you away, with the kind of cargo space to carry away most anything you want to take with youi Thrifty 2-door Brookwood above. See your local authorized Chevrolet dealetj to Hold Drive student organizations in the col lege. The boxes, which will cost the physical plant $2B to build, will be painted and prepared for use by students. The 3-member committee in charge of Nickel Days include: Elaine Gehrke, Dorothy Yeager and Dr. Katherine Fisher, asso ciate professor of Foods and Nu trition and a faculty member of the student-faculty board. iMargaret McPherson To Read on WDFM Margaret McPherson will read "Mother of Manneville," the story of the relationship between a woman writer and a young or phan boy, at 720 p.m. tomorrow on "The Third Programme" on WDFM. Miss McPherson, a runner-up in the Miss Pennsylvania contest, is the current Miss Pennsylvania Association of Tobacco and Candy Dealers. PAGE FIVE