PAGE TWELVE Campus Beat Food, Noise, Fi hts Fill Dead Week Welcome to dead week the one time out of the year when all the organizations have a legal excuse for doing nothing. Another name for the week could be "cram week." Heard some of the boys in one of my Hubology classes talking about the yelling and loud talk ing coming from the fourth floor of Simmons nightly between 10:30 and 11:30. The boys, who live in Pollock B, say at times it is so loud they can't study. It's a good thing the downtown stores are having clearance sales. The boys on the third floor of Thompson have been having so many shaving cream battles that they d go broke if they couldn't get the stuff half-price. Anybody know why the Cam pus Patrol members on duty in Rec Hall on Saturday didn't salute the flag when the National Anthem was played? Administration members can only blame themselves if people don't obey their recent edict ban ning car parking on Fraser Rd. There are no signs warning driv ers going north that the street has been changed to accommo date two-way traffic. Students here shouldn't com plain so loudly about the quality of food the gourmets in Food Service dish up. Before Christmas, an Ohio University student found a worm in his meat while an other found particles of glass mixed in with his food. Request department: softer seats at Rec Hall for those who want to sit through double headers. I have to close now so I can go to the funeral of Archibald K. Turtle. As you remember, he was Elaine Miele's pet turtle but just before Christmas she acci dentally tossed her books on him. The funeral is not open to the public but flowers will be ac cepted. —Prof. Wayne Russian Blazers-- (Continued from page one) the Slavic Club and Russian in structors will serve as transla tors for the event. The blazers are being donated by the following organizations, Baines said: All the college coun cils, TIM, SCCA, Student Movies, Froth, Leonides. AWS, IFC, WRA, West Halls Council, Nittany Council. Panhellenic Council, Book Exchange, Hat Societies Council and Chimes. This list is tentative as some organizations have 'vet to be contacted. CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS 50c BUYS 17 WORDS HE'S READY TO TAKE o'll ALL COMERS Aiwa- AND SO IS FOOT-LONG HOAGIE IT'S UNBEATABLE! gar-a-Qued Chicken Halves arid Wholes SOC an d up FRANK'S HOAIIE RAVEN (Formerly Morrell's) 112 S. Frazier St. SPEEDY DELIVERY 5 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. CALL: AD 8-8381 Turks Learn Reactor Uses Four Turkish scientists who are enrolled in a training program to learn how to operate a reactor participated in an international broadcast transmitted recently by the Voice of America over sev eral transmitters as a part of President Dwignt D. Eisenhower's Atoms-for-Peace program. The four are Galip Baran, Ni hat Eyuboglu, Ayhan Pekun and Recep Sevdik, all of Istanbul. They discussed various phases of their training program at the Nuclear Reactor Facility and their experiences at other nuclear re search centers they have visited in the United States. They de scribed in particular their train ing program at the University which is designed to prepare them to operate the reactor under con struction at Istanbul, Turkey. Turkey expects its first atomic reactor to be put into operation in 1962. + CLASS CASlf—l7 words or less CIIARGE-12 words or less $.50 one Insertion 6.76 two insertions $l.OO three insertions Additional words-3 for $.06 for each day of Insertion ADS MUST BE IN BY 11:00 A.M THE PRECEDING DAY FOR SALE 1946 TWO-DOOR Mercury Montclair hard top, fully equipped, all power. Call EL 6-2768 7 p.m.-9 p.m. SINGER ELECTRIC portable sewing ma chine, used and In perfect condition. Can be guaranteed, If desired. E 29.95. Call AD N-8367. HARLEY DAVIDSON Motor Cycle. $126. Excellent condition, wonderful buy. Call Al, AD 8-9583. USED TELEVISION, excellent condition, reasonably priced. Further information call AD 8-9452. 'USED TELEVISION Seta 17" - 21" table and floor models. Burn's T.V. AD 7-3962. 11)52 RICHARDSON Housetrailer, 27' long. Ideal for married couple desiring low cost living. AD 74994. 1956 ELCAR house trailer, 45%8; air conditioned, good buy at $2OOO. Call AD 8-1966 or at 66 Hilltop Trailer Park. 1956 VICTOR TRAILER 40' by B', two bedrooms, good condition. Call AD 8- 0666. FOR RENT • NEW THREE-ROOM Apartment stove find refrig• furnished, 825 S. Allen Stret. 585.00. Coll nfter 5:00 p.m. AD 7-2763. ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED one-bed room and private bath apartment in quiet neighborhood with country setting. Just 5 minutes drive from downtown State College. Hoodoos rooms with ample closet and storage space. Everything provided except linens and cooking utenails. Enjoy close. friendly tenant-owner relationship. Available Feb. Ist. Phone AD 7-2058. ONE DOUBLE front room twin beds One single room ; both in quiet home Parking available. All 7-4329. QUIET COUNTRY home, 3 large bed rooms, living room, kitchen and bath, oil heat. On hardtop road 10 miles to State College. Children welcome. Available now. Furnished $57.00 or unfurnished '542.50. AD 8-2320. SINGLE OR double, quiet street. two blocks from campus and center of town. 120 East Foster. Call AD 8-0044. LARGE COMFORTABLE, double rooms with cook ing privileges, spring semester. 236 and 242 S. Frazier. Call AD 84494 between 12-noon and 6 p.m. ONE-HA IX OF large double room, with board, 2 blocks from campus. 213 S. Pugh St. Rohe rt K immell, Al) 7-3332. TWO SINGLE rooms in quiet home. Avail able nest nornester. near campus. Call AD 7-4523. Mri E. Beaver. SINGLE ROOM for rant for quiet student. $20.00 per month. Cstll AD 7-43413. FI'RNISIIEII APARTMENT, 2 room, kitchen, 455 E. Beaver. Avnihtble now. Stop in 1.011:11% MODERN 2-BEDROOM Nutriment _ for (our Ftmlents. UN 5-21142, ask for Bob Walking distance from rumpus. DOUHLE ROOMS for rent lit 414 S. Pugh. Large ruonig, bath on each floor. Call AD S-2039. Two BEDnoom unfurniAett apartment with hat Line. Sla S. Allen St.. Apt. 1. Avniinble Feh. 1. Call AD 14-2.726 after it p.m. Si -ROOM mif nrnkheil he a rse, 1 garage, oil h, : r, bl ,rku from entllllllll. Rent reasonable. Al) ;-23119. t;lt A D STUDENTS. uppc relassmen, Com fortable counts with runnink water or ”riva tc bath. Colonial note?, 123 West Niltaoy. Parking. location central. Quietly ‘peraieil for sleep, rest and study. Low sent rates. Phone Al) 7;7392 or Al) .-05 u, ask fo r M rs. Cox. 'Olt RENT--two bedroom trailer, imme diate occupancy. Call AD 7-2025. :11REE BEDROOM for two bedroom and study I architect-designed. contemporary tome in I'atk Forest Village. Nice patio jilt privacy. Mituy built-in features. Spa •ious living and dining areas. Large out ;our play area. $125, Available Feb. 1. ,Vrite Yoa ()Mee Box 1175. State College. TEN STUDENTS: one vacancy in fur nished apartment for three, $3O each looth : one vacancy ;n furnished apart tent for two, $3.1 each month ; includes erYthing. Call AD A-1409 after 3:30 p.m. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Men May Apply For Counselorship The Dean of Men's office has announced that applications are available for positions as Resident Hall Counselors for fall, 1961. Interested men may apply in 121 Waring. Applicants must be 21 years of age, single, of junior standing or higher, and must have an All- University average of at least 2.0. Graduate students are eligible if they do not hold assistantships. Male Resident Hall Counselors receive room and board for their services. If counselors serve more than three terms they pay only one-half of the University tuition each term. All candidates must be avail able for at least three terms, un der the new 4-term system. Davison Heads PSEA Unit Dr. Hugh M. Davison, professor of educational research, has been elected president of the Research Round Table of the Pennsylvania Educational Research Association, a unit of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, IFIEDS + ROOMS FOR RENT—comfortable week end accommodations for parents and friends. Colonial Hotel, 123 W. Nittany Ave. Telephone AD 7-7792 or AD 7-9850, ask for Mrs. Cox. NICELY FURNISHED 3-room apartment bath, garage. One block north of cam- Due. Available Jan. 15. Call AD 7-3387 after 6 p.m. DOUBLE ROOM with private bath, pri vate entrance, refrigerator; east of campus. Call AD 8-1409 after 6 p.m. FURNISHED APARTMENT vacancies for male students. Share with other students. Two blocks from west campus: parking available. Call AD 84409 after 6 p.m. ROOM IN basement reasonable, for cleaning walks and a few odd jobs. AD 7-4022 after :10, FOR SALE OR RENT 2 BEDROOM Trailer, excellent condition. Reasonable rent or rents Ipurchase with no down payment. AD 8-8606 or AD 8-0352. CLASSIFIED AD STAFF meeting Than! day, Jan. 12 at 7:00. Compueory. WILL DO thesis or non-thesis typing: Renosnable rent or rental ourehame with Woodsdale Park. WILD DO typing. Quick, accurate work AD 8-0998. MARE RESERVATIONS now for room and board at Marilyn Hall, 317 H. Beaver Ave. for spring semester. Total board and room $367.00 (a few vacancies at $3&8.00). Ask for Mrs. Petriskey, ATTENTION FRATERNITIES—music for all occasions. The Imperials Orchestra. Fred C. 13unn Jr., 1301 Mifflin St., Hunt ingdon, Pa. Phone MI 3-3292. REATNICK GLOSSARY for the terms and definitions bread-money, chick-girl of the Beatnicks. Send one dime to TERMS, P.O. Box 215, Village Station, New York 14, N.Y. QUALITY CLEANERS, 109 S. Pugh St under new management hut with the best in dry cleaning, laundry and pressing. Will pick up and deliver. Call AD 8.0992. January GLAMOUR transformed Leslie Ann Schultz of State College from a cute girl to a beauty. See how you can bring out your best features In the cur rent issue of GLAMOUR. LIBERAL ARTS Student Council I.ecture Series, Tuesday, Jan. 10. Speaker will be Dr. Philip Young, professor of Litera ture, Topic—Story of an American Myth; Pocahontas. HUB assembly room, 7:30. Reception and refreshments 8:30, HUB lounge. WILL TYPE thesis, term papers; ex perienced. AD 8-8170. BUSS HURLEYand the "Song Smiths" featuring music in rustic rhythm for dancing and parties. Clearfield I'O 6-3436. GREEN FUR mitten, Sunday morning on way to Schwab from South Halle. Phone UN 6-7494. NOTEBOOK CONTAINING German notes. DeSperately needed. Please call Judy UN 5-8514. MAN'S West Philadelphia High School ring, West Halls. Blue atone and dated 19G0. Reward. Call UN 5-6653. GLASSES AT Dlennland Pool. Please call Dick UN 64473. Reward is offered. TYPING, IRONING, Babysitting ---dnys or evenings in my home. M rs. 11 ill. .151 West Pork, Apt. 3. AD 7-2752. WANTED—Fluorescent Desk Study Lamp• Art Martin, AD 8-2164. AMATEUR ARTIST to do line drawings— about 3 hours work with pay. Call Bob, AD 7-3479. IVE ARC in need of two dishwashers who want to eat the best food in town for the spring semester. Apply in person to Phi Kappa Tao. PART TIME work, college students (male only) evenings and Saturdays. Call Mr. Rogers between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. AD 8.2051. Salary $45 a week. SCHOOL BUS drivers, married preferred. Apply Boalsburg Autobus Line, rine Hall. AD 8-0411. FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS LOST WORK WANTED WANTED HELP WANTED Lehigh Flattens— (Continued from page ten) had a little different twist—Go liath won. Charles Moore, Lehigh's heavy weight who has wrestled as low as 177 on occasion, didn't have a sling shot so he did the next best thing by waltzing circles around the mat to keep out of the clutches of State's 250-pound Johnston Oberly. After a scoreless first period Moore let Oberly escape in the second stanza and then stayed away from the EIWA champ the remainder of the period. However, the final step in his strategy, to escape from his bot THE ENGINEERS HAVE HAIRY EARS Today in this age of technology when engineering graduates are wooed and courted by all of Atherica's great industries, how do you account for the fact that Rimbaud Sigafoos, who fin ished at the very top of his class at M.1.T., turned down hun dreds of attractive job offers to accept employment as a machin ery wiper at the Acme Ice Company at a salary of $2O a week with a twelve-hour day, a seven-day week, and only fifteen minutes for lunch? I know what you are thinking: "Cherchez is fe»unc!" You are thinking that Mr. Acme, head of the Acme Ice Company, has a beautiful daughter with whom Rimbaud is madly in love and he took the job only to be near her. Friends, you are wrong. It is true that Mr. Acme does have a daughter, a large, torpid lass named Claudia who spends all her waking hours scooping marzipan out of a bucket and staring at a television set which has not worked in some years. Rimbaud has not the slightest interest in Claudia; nor, indeed, does any other man, excepting possibly John Ringling North. So how come Rimbaud keeps working for the Acme Ice Company? Can it be that they provide him with free Marlboro Cigarettes, and all day long he is able to settle back, make himself comfortable and enjoy the filter cigarette with the un filtered taste? z'/be, frss znEl No, friends, no. Rimbaud is not allowed to smoke on the job and when he finishes his long, miserable day he has to buy his own Marlboros, even as you and I, in order to settle back and enjoy that choice tobacco, that smooth, mellow flavor, that in comparable filter, that pack or box. Well, friends, you might as well give up because you'll never In a million years guess why Rimbaud works for the Acme Ice Company. The reason is simply this: Rimbaud is a seal! He started as a performing seal in vaudeville. One night on the way to the Ed Sullivan show, he took the wrong subway. All night the poor mammal rode the 13.M.T., seeking a helping hand. Finally a kindly brakeman named Ernest Thompson Sigafoos rescued the hapless Rimbaud. He took Rimbaud home and raised him as his own, and Rimbaud, to show his appreciation, studied hid and got ex cellent marks and finished a distinguished academic career as valedictorian of Rimbaud never complained to his kindly foster father, but through all those years of grammar school and high school and college, he darn near died of the heat! A seal, you must re member, is by nature a denizen of the Arctic, so you can im agine how poor Rimbaud must have suffered in subtropical New York and Boston, especially in those tight Ivy League suits. But today at the Acme Ice Company, Rimbaud has finally found a temperature to his liking. He is very happy and sends greetings to his many friends. Any time, any clime, you get a lot to like with a Marlboro— and with Marlboro's newest partner in pleasure, the unfil tered, king-size, brand-new Philip Morris Commander. Get aboard! TUESDAY. JANUARY 10. 1961 torn position in the third period before Oberly could gain riding time, didn't work. The "Big 0" played with Moore like a rag doll but couldn't pin him and had to settle for a 2-0 decision. 123—Slattery, Penn State, dee. Merriam, 10.2. 330—Brallie, Lehigh, dec. Scordo, 0-6. 137—Johnston, Penn State, and Alex ander, Lehigh, drew, 6-6. 147-41unst, Lehigh, dee. Seekler, 6-1. 157—Pendleton, Lehigh, pinned Pifer, 167—Turner, Lehigh, pinned Barone, 177—DetrIxho, Lehigh, dee. Meyer, 9-1. 191—Angell, Lehigh, dec. Trojan, 64. Mwt.—Oberly, Penn State, dec. Moore, On Campo A., hor of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) fll VARSITY C 1881 8181.81..1twe0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers