• —Collegian Photo by Wally Matecr LOCKERS WERE HOT BEING CONSIDERED for the HUB ex pansion plan—claimed William Fuller, director of associated student activities. But immediately following Fuller’s statement, the SGA Assembly passed a recommendation that lockers be installed in the HUB extension, Job Placement Line Begins to Diminish What seemed like endless lines outside the placement office in Old Main have now started to level off, according to George N. P. Leetch, director of the University Placement Service. Leetch said the placement 1000 interviews a wtjek for the last three weeks, last week hav ing 977, the smallest number, j He also said that the volume will fall off regularly for the rest of the spring semester. The serv ice will continue scheduling inter views into May. However, they have advised interviewing corpo rations to schedule interviews early in the semester for there are more students who are in terested at that tune. More companies are inter- : viewing on campus and offer- ] ing more jobs than student can j ever consider. Leetch said. , Three hundred and fifty com- ; panies are scheduled for inter- I views this spring. ' Companies interviewing rarely, stress specific curriculums or 1 averages for job applicants. Very' few (perhaps one out of 50) viewers specify average require ments, he said. . The Placement Service averages 1 31 interviewing companies a day.' These interviews are held in the TIM'S PIP’ t' ’ ‘ 'T** *s. \ Stan Barton's AIM BAND FREE TICKETS MARCH 12, 9to 12 Available at bjj gn Others HUB Desk IiUD Dai I room March IM2 office has averaged more than placement office, the Hetzel Un ion Building and in some rooms m Boucke and Whitmore Labora tory. Mook Conducts Conference j Dr. Maurice A. Mook, professor of anthropology, conducted a Ca reer Day Conference on "College Teaching at the Westtown i School, Westtown. YOUR Last Chance to Register Come to ... ~ UNIVERSITY PARTY'S OKI MEETING 7:00 P.M. 119 Osmond Sunday, March 13 COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Rutledge To|l2 Sororities Assigned Deliver TalkjLocations of New Suites LA • J Locations in the Pollock Area residence halls have been marnaqe assigned to the 12 sororities moving into the new suites next te? foil “Getting to Know You—The ' T T . First Years of Marriage" will AT D< f° thy J< Ll PP, dean of women, and Mrs. Norma be the lecture topic of Dr. Mountan - assistant to the dean of women and sorority advisor, AaronL. Rutledge, head of thej m Th e ere e are lg e l ight nt buildings m Pi / .R elta ,n Ga T m; '\ secont3 ; counseling service and the tbe P° bocl(: area—three are ® p f llo ll phl ’ ° men, four are for women and the' •Pollock No. 4 Alpha Hu, training program in counseling! e] ghth one is a dining area first: Kappa Alpna Theta, sec and psychotherapy at the Merrill-' The women’s buildings will be onc! ' Alpha Xi Delta, fourth Palmer School, at 7:30 tonight inlbehind the men’s halls. • Pollock No. 5-Alpha Gamma 214 Boucke, j T . Delta, first; Zeta Tau Alpha, sec- Tomorrow he will conduct an! a nd the floors they occupy are onc !' pbi . Mu - fourth, overnight couple's retreat at the'as follows- The third floor of each building Bucknell Conference Center. The| 0 Pi P * P 1 • 'will b e occupied by sorority mem iengaged couples will hold i n for- f . * t P nL °, k Phl ' bers who cannot be assigned to [mal discussions and counselingi « Tau se c-j their SO ior.ty’s floor. 'sessions with Rutledge about: ond floor, DeU a Zetri, foijithi flooi.j The suites will be on the ground ‘problems they may face in their! •Pollock No. 3—Alpha Delta'level __ jmarriages. " ~ ■■ , ~~~ m~ ■■ ■■ j Rutledge has received under graduate degrees in biology and the social sciences. He did his graduate work in the psychology and philosophy of counseling. In addition to conducting a pri vate practice as marriage coun selor, he is a member of the American Association of Mar riage Counselors, president of the National Council on Family Rela tions and chairman of the plan ning committee for the 1960 Inter national Conference on the Fam ily. Rutledge is the author of many magazine articles and books. Two of his books, “Marriage Counsel ing” and “Responsible Family Living” are now being published. Blackadar Participates In Meteorological Talks Dr, Alfred K. Blackadar, asso ciate professor of meteorology, has recently completed a series of nine lectures at several Pennsylvania colleges on atmospheric turbu lence, numerical weather predic tion, and the meteorological uses of artificial earth satellites . He was invited to present these lectures by the American Me teorological Society in connection with its visiting scientist program under the sponsorship of the Na tional Science Foundation. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS BUY, SELL, TRADE, TELL 0 0 Right 'm ALONG with; rue ■q'SRIEW.s' Q'RfILtYS; o'haras I v O'SHEAS ah'p'O too) ak' n ; 1 -fCi 1 -v‘ ' <£? LUTHERAN STUDENT SERVICES GRACE CHURCH COLLEGE and ATHERTON Sunday: March 13th 8:30 & 10:45 a.m. The Service 6:30 p.m. Beginning of Religion and Science Series STUDENT CENTER DR. ROBERT OLIVER Head of the Penn Sfafe Speech Department "From Darwin to Scopes" SALLY DARNES LOOKS A! Everybody's Talking About the Jones Boy Namely Antony Armstrong. Tony, a former photographer, was once asked to leave the Royal Opera House in Convent Gardens for taking ballet pic tures from the stalls. New he enjoys a seat in the royal box with his intended, Princess Margaret, while the flashbulbs pop in his direction. Life has collected a fetching group of Tony’s photographs. A little offbeat in subject and style, Tony’s pictures give us a hint of his apparent viva ciousness and wit. His gimmick shot of Princess Margaret caused some uproar among the English. Sleepy Southern Senators Set Record The Supreme Court hall looked something like a Penn State dorm during finals last week. In one great attempt to defeat the civils rights legisla tion, our nation’s Southern Senators slipped into suits over red pajamas to answer to the quorum call. This filibuster set a Senate record of 82 hours of continuous session. Life pho tographers captured all the hu mor and incongruity of the situation by snapping the Sen ators snoozing on cots among the stately columns of our na tion’s capitol. Dixie Wins in Grins Penn State upperclassmen will be reminded of the “Hyp notic Eyes Contest” held on campus a few years ago when they see the winners in the “Smile Contest” conducted on grade school children by the University of Alabama School of Denistry. We guess the little smiler in the upper left-hand corner would also be a shoo in winner in the National Freckle Contest. Khrushchev's "Can-Can" Passes Censors The new 20th Century-Fox film, “Can-Can,” which de- LIFE lighted Mr. Khrushchev until Mrs. Khrushchev said it must n’t. will be shown in American movie theaters soon. Life pho tographers caught colorful shots of a slinky ballet by Shirley MacLaine and Marc Wilder. With a cast like Frank Sinatra, Maurice Chevalier, Louis Jor dan and Miss MacLaine and songs by Cole Pori or, even Mrs. Khrushchev would applaud. ’Beautiful Dress, Orhbach or Dior?" This is becoming a socially acceptable question even at New York’s fashionable char ity ball where a dozen social ites arrived all impeccably at tired in the same Orhbach du plicate of a white Balenciaga evening dress last winter. Co eds will love all nine of Orh bach’s copies colorfully photo graphed for Life by Mark Shaw in some distinguished Paris home. Live a Little Take a Look at the World’s -Week. See Ike reach for anoth er champagne and U.N. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gro myko “cut a rug.” Music ma jors, read about the quiet music at the University of Detroit. And don’t miss the picture story of Elvis bidding German beauty Priscilla Beaulieu good bye as he returns, minus side burns, to his fans in the States. PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers