PAGE TWO Table Tennis Finalists To Compete Tomorrow The men’s residence halls table tennis championships will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Runkle Hall. The winners and runners-up from West, North and Nit tany Halls will participate in the matches and first, second and third medals will be given the final winners. Five O'clock Will Present McGirr Play “Berliner Cabaret” written by David McGirr, graduate student in theater arts from Haverhill, Mass, will be presented by the Five O’clock Theater Monday in the Little Theater in the basement of Old Mam The play is the story of a love affair between a German night club singer and an American sol dier. The singer, who will be played by Mtmi Mungello, is torn be tween duty toward her father andi love for the soldier, who will be; played by Ed Rolf. | The action of the play takes 1 place during the Berlin airlift. J Others in the east are Burt Ber-I dis and Joel Daniels who recently played in "Detective StorjT’ with; the parts of Lt. Monoghan and “Charlie the Cat Burglar” respec tively, The play is directed by Wil liam Kotzwmkie, junior in arts and letters from Scranton, and the technical direction is under Richard Mazza, senior in arts from Drexel Hill. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS BUY. SELL. TRADE, TELL THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Those participating are Vilnis Reinis and Robert Fishbien, Nit tany Halls; Bill Yeagley and Nick Coeh, North Halls; and Myles Shoop and Harry Trostel, West Halls. A "Quartet Harmony Night" , will be held tomorrow night as a part of the men's residence hall recreation program. j About three fraternity quartets' jwill appear, Wayne Page, Tecre [ation consultant, said. | The quartets will appear at 7 Ipm at the Nittany NUB, 8 p.m jat Waring and 9 p.m. at Warnock. The program will be given to ! ' create interest in the residence hall quartet competition. Quar tets from any hall may enter the contest until April 20. Each area will have its own competition and the winners will irepresent their area in a final [contest on May 6 in the Hetzel [Union assembly. i A championship trophy will be I presented to the winning group (for display m their residence hall area. —lsn't it peculiar that middle age always starts a few years earlier for the other fellow? - | LOBSTER HOUSE \ Sunday Dinners > 12-8 | TAXI RETURN GRATIS Explosion Hits Borland Lab; Cause Unknown An explosion of undetermined, origin rocked the Dairy Science! Building yesterday morning caus-i ing extensive damage to appara-[ tus and equipment, but no serious injuries to personnel. , The explosion which occurred ,at about 11:20 a.m. was felt throughout the building. Two [windows were broken and the [door was damaged by flying de ; bris. A large window on the hood [was also smashed. Damage was [estimated at $lOOO. There were three people in the room at the time of the blast, but onlv one received any in juries. Robert McCarthy, research , assistant in dairy science, received minor scratches on his forehead. Apparently a reagent that was on a shelf and not in use, blew up without warning. In describ ing the blast, McCarthy said it happened so fast that it was over 1 before anybody had realized what had occurred. j "GOLIATH AND THE BARBARIANS" STARTS SUNDAY ■nrann uosccm m. levins ■ THE MOST 1 diabolical BHIBBr B MURDERER OF B *“ TtM " WPBfB 1 mwm HE HAS ONE OF THE MOST UNUSUAL JOBS IN BUSINESS TODAY He’s a computer programmer. It s a job that didn’t even exist until a few years ago. But today it’s one of the most important-and certainly most unusual—jobs that a college graduate can do. Data processing systems, with their advanced technol ogies and tremendous speeds, offer new challenges to college graduates. It is a field for new ideas, new methods, and new techniques. Setting Up The Problem A computer programmer analyzes a business, industrial, or scientific problem, and translates it into a language which the computer can understand. From there the computer goes to work with prodigious speed and accuracy. Often it can solve problems in minutes, which might take days or even weeks, if done by other methods. The assignments are interesting. IBM programmers have programmed computers to tell businessmen the best locations for new factories; help engineers design electronic circuitry; aid manufacturers in finding tha most profitable potential market for new products; work out payroll or quality-control problems at the push of a few buttons; and even analyze how other computer programs should be developed. Your Logical Abilities Co To Work No previous experience, or even knowledge of the way computers work, is necessary to begin a career as a computer programmer. But you should have the talent and ability to analyze complex problems, to think clearly and to express yourself well. These, plus a college degree with two years of college mathematics, are important prerequisites. If you qualify as a computer programmer, you will be given an inten sive training course in the problem-solving methods of the computer. The salaries are excellent, and your future could be as unlimited as tha future of the computer itself. If you think you might be interested in becoming a computer programmer, you can obtain more details from the IBM representative who can be contacted through your Collega Placement Director. Or write, outlining your background and interests, to: Manager of Technical Employment, Dept, 875 IBM Corporation 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y. Scholarships j To Be Given I Applications for the Penn StaU Student Scholarships are now available in the office of the Co ordinator of Scholarships, 205 D Old Main. Students who have already I filled out the regular University [scholarship application are auto matically eligible. i ! To be qualified, a student must 'be enrolled in a 4-year curricul [um and have had at least one isemester’s resident instruction [with a 2.5 All-University average, i Preference will be given to those who have participated in student activities and to those who must supplement their finances with part-time work. It is hoped that the awards will be presented at the SGA Assem bly meeting April 7. The funds for the scholarships come from the proceeds of Spring Week and the money collected for 1 traffic fines. Players Present An Italian Straw Hat A French Farce March 18 & 19,25 & 26 (enter Stage LAST TWO WEEKS Friday night tickets readily available 40th Anniversary Production INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION SATURDAY. MARCH 19. 1960 Alumnus to Appear In TV Production Don Taylor, a 1942 alumnus, will appear in “The Tweed Hat” on the Alcoa Theater at 9:30 p.m. Monday over WJAC-TV channel 6. Taylor wrote and directed tha play. He will also play the male dead. i As an undergraduate Taylor I was active in Penn State Players |and in Thespians. He has appear jed in movies and during World War II he played in Air Force stage shows. Taylor Is now directing and acting in television shows. —ln 1884, the first private bath was introduced in an American hotel. In 1958, hotels and resorts invested over $19,000,000 in daily newspapers to inform the public of their luxurious accomodations. * CATBAUM LAST TIMES TODAY "THE MOUSE THAT ROARED" BEGINS SUNDAY “SINK THE BiSMARCK” Kenneth More - Dana Wynter ★ NITTANY NOW: OPENS 1:15 P.M. "RUN SILENT, RUN DEEP" BEGINS SUNDAY SCREEN ART SUCCESSES OF YESTERYEAR! Sun.—Chayefsky’s "Marly" Mon. Thrills "The Green Scarf" Tues—" Bachelor Party" Wed. & Thurs.— Brigitte Bar dot. "And God Created Wom an" Fri.—" The Great Man" Sat.—" Sands of Iwo Jima" IBM