PAGE TWO Merchttnts Pied • e Fuilds for *arking By DOTI DRASHER The downtown parking problem in State College received financial support from local merchants recently when $ll,OOO was given in cash and pledges to the parking fund, Paul Mazza, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said yester da The $ll,OOO fund will be used by the ing Authority toward planning for better parking facilities, he said A proposal several weeks ago to help create more off-street parking facilities was not well re ceived, he said. At a recent cham ber luncheon meeting Mazza chal lenged the merchants to support the parking plan and 22 business men responded. About 80 or 90 merchants must be contacted yet, he added. He said that the problem, as yet, was not that the shopping centers were drawing business from the downtown area but that people were finding parkfng areas scarce. The long range view of the parking proposal is to plan for the future needs of the commun ity. Mazza said. Mazza outlined the four basic problems of downtown parking: The downtown area is al ready suffering from a lack of adequate parking facilities. •Downtown parking is a prob lem for the community and downtown merchants and prop erty owners in particular. •The problem must he solved by a cooperative effort between the community and the downtown businessmen and property own ers. ®The community has created a Parking Authority with the pow er to borrow money, acquire land and operate parking facilities, and merchants and property owners must demonstrate support for worthwhile parking programs. Mazza said that the "decline of property values and loss of busi ness can never be fully recovered once the customer acquires the habit of shopping elsewhere." 2 Students Hurt While Scooterinq Two students were injured Tuesday night when their motor scooter went out of control on a turn. The operator of the motor scoot er, Stephen L. Goodman, a soph omore in industrial engineering from Philadelphia, and his pas senger, Nancy Smith, a freshman in arts and letters from Jackson ville Beach, Fla,, received injuries on Route 550 at Matternville, on the road to Bellefonte. They were taken to the Univer sity Health Center. Dr. Herbert 11. Glenn, director of the Center, said the couple was; not hurt seriously. Gorlow Receives Award A, 'bright lectureship has been awarded to Dr. Leon Gor low, associate professor of psy chology, for the period from Jan. 1 to Sept. 1, 1962. You'll ;end your favorite sandwich at . . Ye Olde Burger Shoppe HAMBURGERS HOT DOG and SAUERKRAUT 25c 20c 10-oz. RIB STEAK with French Fries, Lettuce and Tomato, Bread and Butter $1.29 Your favorite beverages and sandwiches at The My-Oh-My Lounge beneath the burger shoppe both 1 1 Directly Across from Old Main State College Park- Ex-President To Address Boy Scouts General Dwight D. Eisenhower returns to the University next Thursday to address a regional en campment of Explorer scouts. It will be his sixth visit to Penn State since 1950. The former President will fly from Gettysburg to speak at a luncheon meeting of 1,000 Region 111 Explorers, convened for a three-day educational and voca tional conference. He then will spend several hours touring sports clinics set up for the Explorers and featuring Penn State coaches Charlie Speidel, George Harvey, John Egli, Gene Wettstonte, Ken Hosterman, and Joe Boyle. General Eisenhower will fly back to his Gettysburg farm at about 3:30 p.m., using the private plane of Roger Firestone, an of ficial of Firestone Tire and Rub ber Co. and a scouting enthusiast., Firestone is committee chairman of Region HI, which includes Pennsylvania, Maryland, Dela ware, Virginia, West Virgnia, and the District of Columbia. Geenral Eisenhower last visited the campus in September, 1956, to participate in the dedication of the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Memorial Chapel. WMAJ Program Highlights 6:30- 9:30 Abe in the A.M. 9:35.11:00 Dick Ilorner Show 1:30- 4:30 Bob Zamboni Sh. 4:30- 6:00 Dick Horner Show 7:05- 9:00 Curtain Time 10:05- 1:00 Groovology 54 NBC NEWS ON THE HOUR NBC EMPHASIS Monday through Friday MONITOR From NBC on Weekends PITTSBURGH PIRATES BASEBALL WMAJ 1450 Wide Range Radio Night & Day SUMMER COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Claremont Group Gives 2nd Concert A concert of chamber music by Beethoven, .Mendelssohn and the contemporary Gustavo Bercerra was presented Tues day night by the Claremont String Quartet, an internationally known recital group, in the second of a series of eight concerts on campus this summer. The group will present the next concert—a lecture recital at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Hetzel Union as sembly room. 'The quartet has toured the United States . , New Zealand, Aus tralia, Israel, Holland, and France during the last year and this is their fourth summer to return to the University. The.quartet members are Marc Gottlieb and Vladimir Weisman, violin, William Schoen, viola, and Irving Klein, cello. The group has been playing together for eight years but all of them have been studying music since early child hood. The quartet will alternate be tween Harvard University and this University during July and August to present their concerts and lecture recitals. The entire cycle of Beethoven string quartets will be presented at Harvard. At a recent concert in San Fran cisco a reviewer said of the quar tet's performance: "For balance of ensemble, keenness and aptness of expression, vitality and warmth. the Claremont Quartet has few equals in the world." Duplicate Bridge Duplicate Bridge games will be played at 7 p.m.Mondays in the HetzellJnion cardroom under the direction of Dr. Roger Saylor, pro fessor of business statistics. Sum mer term memberships will be 50 cents. MR: CAT 11 AV /111 CONDITIONED HIS BIGGEST, BROADEST, FUNNIEST EVERI and HARRY JAMES and Ms band • Predated sad Directed by JERRY LEWIS • Witten by Jerry Lents and SW Mcbmond • Amide Prothmer Ernest G. Gluckman • m• sams b Nall Mono u 4 lark Mote A ranatoent !Moro • traChnilarrUre L DAY "WILD IN THE COUNTRY" Starts SATURDAY Corning Lana Turner in SOONI "BY LOVE POSSESSED" Student, Alumnus To Train For Peace Corps Projects Two University students have been selected to train for the first Peace Corps projects —a road building project in Tanganyika and a develop ment program in Colombia. William Grubb, sophomore in counseling from Westport, Conn.,l and Arthur Young, a grade ate in forestry of the class of '55, from Schwenksville began intensive Peace' Corps training Monday at Texas Western College in El Paso and Rutgers University in New Jersey. Sixty hours a week will be spent by the volunteers in class es, laboratory-language work, athletic training and tests. The classes will include the study of the history of the country they will visit. United States history. community development, and technical problems which the volunteers will face. The formal agreements for the work that the 28• Peace Corps members will do in Tanganike DELICIOUS . . , is the only way to describe the food at DUFFY'S. Treat yourself to a sizzling steak in the rustic atmosphere of Duf ly's Tavern in Boalsburg. Drive out. tonight and enjoy dinner at Duffy's. YoAr favor ite beverages served from 4:30 to midnight. Dining, room open from 5 to 9:30. (Closed on Sunday) Duffy's In Boalsburg. 4 miles east of State College on Route 322 (turn right at the Texaco Station/ FEATURE AT 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 THURSDAY, JUNE 29. 1961 include surveying, mapping and road building which will espe cially aid farmers in getting pro duce to the markets. The Colombian volunteers will work in the villages on projects such as well drilling, school construction, malaria control, and road buildifig. Care Inc. will be in charge of the Colombian project under an agreement with the Peace Corps. Another examination for per sons interested in volunteering for the Peace Corps will be given about the middle of July at a date which will be announced soon. Persons interested in taking the examination do not have to have an application on file at Peace Corps headquarters but may fill out one at the examination. The first train to come over the newly built Bellefonte Central Railroad arrived at the campus's station in 1891, where Engineer ing Unit D now stands. ATE.- N°W T ‘ Feat: 1:37, 3:33, 5:32, 7:31, 9:30 vt..(4...0 , ..0.0.. ......t. itaNs . w o Eras ~ grig ...5...,. . . .....ScoPg Col.oit by OEM . , . - . - Netasild by 2011. Ce-atn - pros STARTS . FRIDAY - -mum el as Ikeald Wiwi latt. Soma um 'HMO N HAND' IS THE MOST DELIGHTFUL AND 11FARIVARMNG PIM I'VE SEEN IN MANY YEARS!" L'' . l Z" g' NAM INISPRID risroorz, Er g o Mil IMPIMMTVAA • A COMM EMI Feat: 1:40, 3:41, 5:42, 7:43, 9:44 ( :,STARLITE , * , DMVE-111 BEAM *, memo vas, an. as e• • w Cerrititrf STATI COltfOr rnttrOVlAt THUR. - FRI. - SAT. Show Time 9:05 p.m. is 3 BIG HITS ab "The Hoodlum Priest" Don Murray & Cindt Woods The Marriage Go-Round Sagan Hayward & James Mason "Young Jesse James" . Ray Strirklyn & Merry Anders SUN. St MON., July 2, 3 3 Smash Hite Holiday Special "Carnival Rock" Susan Cabot & Brian Hutton Pitts many Famous Rork 'it Roll Stars "Walk Into Hell" Chips Ratterity s & Francoise Christophe "The Right Approach" Juliet Prowse, Frankie Vaughan Martha Hyer, Gary Crosby Glenn Ford & Donald O'Connor "Cry For Happy" Marlon Brands, & Mary • Murphy "Wild One" "Meet the Stars under the Stars at STARLITE"