The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 29, 1960, Image 7
fRIDAY. APRIL 29. 1 2900 At Be A record total dents will receive Stadium. If weather does not permit the program to be held in the stadium, three exercises will be held at 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m and 3:30 p.m, in Recreation Hall,; T. Reed Ferguson, director of Uni veisity relations said If the outdoor schedule is fol- 1 lowed there will be no limitation to the number of guests that may be invited by each graduate, he ! said. i Tiie mam problem that will arise at the stadium is the lack; of parking facilities. Guests will' be requited to paik on the ROTC diill field north of Wagner Build- 1 ing, Ferguson explained, because 1 in June, parking will not be avail able adjacent to the stadium j A 10-foot sidewalk leading to the stadium is now under con struction and is expected to bei completed by June, Ferguson! said The grading and planting of turf parking areas near the sta dium, the construction under way on the new residence halls In the area and possibly the construction of the State high way that will intersect Three- Mile Road between the stadium and Wagner Building will make the outdoor site for the June commencement less desirable this year than it has been in the past or will be In the future, Ferguson said. If indoor exercises are held' each graduate will be given four! tickets when he picks up his cap! and gown. The following schedule! will be observed in case of bad! weather: j • 10:30 am—Engineering and; Aiehiteeture, Mineial Industries! and candidates for associate de grees • 1:30 pm—Agriculture, Edu-| cation, Home Economics and Physical Education and Athletics ®3:30 p.m—Business Adminis tration, Chemistry and Physics and the Liberal ArN. Candidates for advanced de giees will receive their diplomas at the same time as the under giaduates in the college in which they have majored. ATTENTION T.G.l.Fers: FRIDAYS from 4 io 6 P.M. and 9 P.M. to 12:30 A.M. The Town House presents DON KREBS QUARTET OPEN HOUSE Saturday, April 30, 1960 LECTURES: 1. Dr. Fred Tracy "Elementary Physics" 117 OSMOND LAB 10:00 A.M. 2. Dr. Mary Willard nsored by CHEM-PHYS Student Spd o Graduate iver Stadium pf 2900 undergraduates and graduate stu degrees at 10:30 a.nt. June 11 at Beaver Rifle Drill Team Places 9th in Meet Pershing Rifles has just re turned fiom participating in the ! Cherry Blossom Festival drill competition at Washington, DC i Company B-5, a tri-seivice drill team, competed against about 75 lof the best teams in the nation ; 'The meet consisted of trick drill competition and a parade thiough .Washington. Company B-s’s ad- Ivanced trick drill team, com manded by P/R Second .Lieu- 1 .tenant Lynn Davis, placed ninth !in the trick drill competition and ! also participated in the parade, i | SCCA Applications The Student Check Cashing Agency will accept applications tor staff positions until Wednes- 1 ; day. I They may be turned in at the Het/el Union desk. UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS 1 CM-i.og. 19 8, completion of otleoit 1 yearot college) l| GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS 1 THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS 1 H • * • comprising 350 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brother-Sister m §» fo-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Mid- 1 !§ die Atlantic Stales and Canada, M M •.. INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concerning summer employ- % £ ment as Counselors, Instructors or Administrators, m" •' POSITIONS in children's camps, in all areas of activities, H jj| ara available, . W m Write, Phone, or Call fn Person ’ M 1 Association of Private Camps Dept, C f§ fess West 42nd Street, OX 5-2656, New York 36, N. Y. CHEM-PHYS 8 a.m. —l2 noon "Criminology 119 OSMOND LAB 11:00 A.M. EVERYONE WELCOME THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA TREAT MOM ROYALLY 1 bill McMullen florist 130 E. College Avenue EXHIBITS: 1. Osmond Lab 2. Whitmore Lab 3. Pond Lab 4. Walker Lab DOC Council Discusses Final Plans for Dance The members of the Division of Counseling Council made final ar iangcments for their dance at the council meeting last night. The dance will be held from 9 to 12 tomoriow night in the Hetz el Union ballroom. It is open to everyone, and theie is no admis sion chaige, A committee was formed to in vestigate methods of securing better participation in the fall elections. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS I BUY. SELL. TRADE, TELL I Morrell's Will Make SPRING WEEK A Complete Success Pizza Hoagies Berger Boats Delicious Chili French Fries Soft Drinks AD B*B3Bl Delivery 9-12 A gift and card from BILL McMULLEN'S will be a royal treat on Mother's Day. Gifts will be wrapped and packed for mailing free of charge. AD 7-4994 Council Sally Dames Looks at TV TONIGHT After the float parade to night if you have a chance to catch even part of the Bell Telephone Hour on NBC-TV you'll be icwarded by familiar you-bet-your-iife humor. It's Gioucho Marx playing Ko-Ko, tlie Lord High Executioner, in the most popular Gilbert and Sullivan opeielta, The Mikado. Groucho savs of Mr. Gilbcit an d Mr. Sullivan, ‘'those guys’ll be glad thev are dead when they hear me." In Life's feature Groucho, minus his fa mous cigar, is pictured in Jap anese headgear, lucking up hw heels and holding hi-- “lethal snickersnee" at a full aim’s length. LIKE MAN . . . FROM JUMPSVILLE The latest toy bouncing aiound the country pet haps destined for the Nittan.v Val ley soon is the trampoline. Or iginally a circus performoi's device, the tiampolme has sud denlv become a two million dollar national ciaze stalled oil the West Coast. To keep the business “jump ing" aie kids t'vmg to outdo each other tuck wise, execu tives relaxing and motions le duemg. Tiampolme centeis charging 40 cents a half hour of bouncing are springing up alt over at the rate of 10 a week. Life's cover story on this “boom in bounceland" shows springs by babies, clumps, a 78-year-old movie extra and Joe E. Brown. LA GRANDEUR FRANCAISE Colorfully pictured in this week’s issue aie some musts to see in France whether you'te go.ng aboard on the student tour this summer or still plan ning pipedi earns. Statesman De Gaulle, who arrived to the tune of a 21-gun salute in Washington recently, has levived French grandeur in our eyes by meaningful de scriptions of France and the scenes shown in pal tieular. He says of Napoleon, whose tomb of neoclassic splendor is pictuied, that although that hero “covered Europe with graves” people still flood to see his tomb Also shown are Joan of Arc, St. Denis in Pans and other historical symbols. PAGE SEVEI STEEPLECHASE STORY Steepleclniiing, a new idea for a Queen of Heads event. The know-how, bouowcd from the Butish, is colorfully illus trated on 10 pages of this Week’s Life. From dawn canters on roll ing lields to neck and neck races over precarious hurdles, the ait of steeplechasing is still a favoiite among the English. Life's spread includes pictures of a dangerous tumble, a jump and some apropos quotes by Sir Winston Chutchill. CUES FOR COMMUNITY LIVING With the new dorms de signed foi community living to begin next fall, we can take a few Ups fiom Umveisity of California students on ways to get acquainted next door Thev devised a giant-sue chess game wilh yaid-lugh chessman to be used in the windows of the men's and women s dorms which face each other Communication, of course, was necessaiy to de- cide analogic moves Pw/as weie dehveiPd m laundiy baskets to the \ ictims of a 7 30 cm row by their neighbois and col tee dates were made by Moise code LIFE THIS WEEK Imagine youmelf small-talk ing at a cocktail party when a 12-foot anaconda snake slith ers onto the scene. It hap pened in New Hope, Penna. See the Butish fashion hints of what will be m Maigaiet's trousseau and the new way Los Angeles recruits football players. It’s all heie plus more in the Mav 2nd issue