atoksURDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1962 THIS WEEKEND ON CAMPUS 'Ed College Leads Term Enrollment TODAY Entertainment The Penn_ State Players will present "Five; Finger Exercise" at 8 p.m. at Center Stage. ' "Man of a Thousand: : Faces 1 starring Dorothy Malene and James Cagney, will be shown at 7:30 and 9:3o'p.m. in the HUB" assembly room. - • ,/ Organizations •SENSE will present "Sing Out for Peace", a prograrn 'by Alix Dogkin at 8 p.m. Dobkin is .a professional folk singer , who plays the• guitar and banjo. The Sports Cir Club will run i iti second wipter rally. beginning at 2 p.m. from the Graduate Circle . - parking lot east of 'campus. Be ginners are invited. • A retreat will be held for As . socia:ticn of Women • Students community 9 council• presidents at 130 p.m. tomorrow in the Kappa "'Delta suite in Cross Hall. The 'Women's Recreational As sociation will sponsbr a Modem dance performance by the noted professional and instructor of dance, Charles Weidman at 3:30 • pO. in the White building gym nasium. The performance is open t4r . ? students, faculty and the public. Lectures • Jacinto C. Berja, permanent representative of the Philippine Mission of • the United Nations, will speak it the annual banquet of the Cosmapolitan Club at 6 p.m. In the Presbyterian Church. Tick ets may be obtained at the HUB desk or in 108 Sports • The Penn SAate. gymnastics team will face Navy at 8 p.m. in net Hall. , 1 Tartnan to Serve On. Publicity Staff 'Penn State sports publicity di rector Jim Tarman has', been , named' District 2 representative to the National Collegiate , Athletic Association. committee on public, relations., • The announcement was made by the NCAA council, which voted on the appointments at its recent meeting in' Chicago. Nine others were named. Two representatives are . Penn State graduates Fred Stabley of Michigan State, who" is chair man of the group, and .Baaron Pittenger .of Harvard. Tarman, whose 'duties will in clude the. eastern pare of the country excluding the New Eng land area, succeeds John Cox of the U.S. Naval Academy. His ap pointinent "is for two years. Ellis Island in New York Bay was America's immigration sta tion from 1892t0 1843 .and is named for Samuel Ellis. It is now the chief immigration and de portee center. Wile 0 SUM 1.1=1111.11 Junior Year I in 1 ' I New Yon( .1 I . I . s a I i An unusual one-ynar : I • collage program. u I a terfel c e lLlWl3l3"l 3 legit - I. Mai for I Modtierir for beet, Year Prelim 3 . Ns r York Unirrsity . titt MO. N. Y. • Faculty lusicheon Club John D. Vairo, assistant profes sor of journalism. will speak to re Faculty Luncheon Club . at :30 p.m Monday in the Hetzel Union ./dining room. Vairo will tspealt on "Regional Planning." • " Other Meetings law Bible Fellowship, 1 p.m., 218 HUB Tomorrow Emerson Society," 6:30 p.m., 212 'Eisenhower Chapel Folklore Society, 6:30 p.m.. HUB ballroom ,Model Railroad Club, 3 p.m.', 218 RUB Protestant Service of Worship, 9 a.m., Eisenhower Chapel !Roman Catholic Mass, 9' a.m., Schwab Auditorium Rangers. 1:20 p.m.. Wagner field SyedenbOrgian, 10:30 a.m., 212, 218 HUF3 , • . • Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m., 212 213 HUB Angel Flight, 6 p.m., 217, 218 HUB Bible Fellowship,.7 p.m, 214 HUB Bridge Club, 6:30•p.m., HUB card- MOM Engineering Mechanics Seminar. • 4 pin., 210 Hammond Mens Residence Council, 9 :15 p.m.. 203 HUB Model Railroad Club, 7 p.m,, 113 RUB - Penn State Pacers movie, 7 p.m., 119 Osmond Placement Service, 8 a.m., 212, 213 HUB t•'. Siima Pi Sigma. 11 per, HUB 93- sembly room USAF, 9:30 cm., ' ground floor HUB Scots to Give $l,OOO Grant St. Andrew's Society, an organ- SINCE as i ncept i on, t h e kutz ization 'for men of 'Scottish des- has had naiy one change in per cent, will award a $l,OOO scholar- 'sonnet, when Connie Kay re ship for a year's , study abroad, placed drummer Kenny Clark. at St. 'Andrew's niversitY. St:Other members of the group are Andrew's, Scotland. 'John Lewis. • pianist and music In order to be eligible: a can-;director: Percy Heath, bass player didate must be a male of Scotch and -Milt Jackson, vibraharp descent in his sophomore year'player. . from the Philadelphia - area. Be The group has been called- the must be in the top quarter• of;'first pure concert ensemble in his class and be active in extra-:jazz- and practices wha t Ray curricular activities. ',mond IL Brown, associate pro- The scholarship will cover anlfessor of music, calls 'a sophisti expenses at St Andrew's liaiver-!sated, intellectual approach" to site and the cast of the trans- , jazz. Atlantic passage . . The members have attempted During the five years that theito lose their individual personali-1 scholarship has been awardedities in the unit by practicing close two University students have , re- rules of stage arrangement and ceived it. The current scholarship is held by Craig Bartholomew, junior in Liberal Arts from Phila delphia, who was a student here last year. • All interested applicants should contact Ralph N. Krecker, di iector of Student Aid. 218 'Wil lard, "as soon as possible" THE (Mkt* e tOIIEGLAN MMMSTY PARK NEMMVANIA_ Monday Of the 10 colleges at the Uni-•and Architecture has 2= stu- have enrollments of less than •versify, the College of Education dents enrolled in the various cur-'l,OOO students. has the highest number of stu- ricula, such as electrical engi-j Comparing the enrollments of dents enrolled for. the wiriter!neering, chemical enginiering,•the four classes for the winter term. (mechanical etceineering., and acro-' term, the freshman class ha 5.4.130 A total of 2,854 students is en nautical and ; pace engineering. ; stud ents;tt the sophomore dims, rolled in the various curricula of A total of 1r .5111 are enrolled in . 3 . 80 S students, the junior diem the education school. • the various•cprricula of the Col-' 3 3 58 students and the senior 2.94,1ege of Business Administration_class. - 2,882 students. Adding the itlider tl3 en - ,making it•thefourth ranking col-, Total University Park enroll. rolled in sae College of Physical lege in enrollment tor the winter ment for the winter term is Education and Athletics, there is t erm , , , 116,458 students, ine.uding under :l. a total of 3,156 students enrolled ' !graduate and graduate students, The College of A.griculture• in educational and recreational • jixah part-time and full time. This ranks fifth in enrollment with curricula. :marks the largest enrollment for 1,172 students. SANICLNG SECOND in the - •', ;the equivalent of a spring senies- THE COLLEGE Of Chemistry;ter period. according to Robert G. number of. students enrolled for and Physics totals an encollmentlternreuter, registrar. a single college, .is the College• of 1,011. The remaining three col-, - The enrollment for the 14 of the Liberal Arts with 2,596' leges of Home Economics, (681). Ccuurrionwealth campuses is 3,332, students. The College of Engineering vision of Counseling, MO), each.rolirrient to 21,848 students. 3,000 Tickets Left For Jazz Concert Henry Muellers, freshman in 'engineering - from Garden City, N.Y.. was assessed Cal 50 in fines :and Over 1000 student tickets'firess. Another Innov oa st this week by William ation -:they . . have made ade it simultaneous irn-T• Ben , just i ce of the Peace. alter !still remain f c) r t he•U n iverS it Ylprovization by all members while he pleaded guilty to purchasing iArtisfS Series presentation of Performing. ialchnholic bet-crates although he It is this practice which Jules is si minor. the Modern Jazz Quartet at Heller. director of the School of; ~ Muellers was arrested by State 8 p.m. Sunday in Recreation the Arts , calls "true im P rori " -, College police last Saturday night. Hall. . , Ition. - He said that the group is Iffelt id the police testified that ;one of the few that does not pre- they i " hod stopped iduelien; after Ticket distribution will eon- sent improvisations which aret-• y tne saw him walking on finthei 'time from 9 am. to 12 p.m, and actually - rehearsed but- soundi Aney with o pootoge wider %,,.. sad tomorrow real. 1 to 5 p.m. today u 7 ranm. at the lietrel 'Union desk. About , HELLER COMPARED the Mod 'Boo don-student tickets are stillßell said that !duellers said he ern Jazz Quartet to West rosct had . purchased beer at a local available for $1.25 each. • ij azz groups in that they are ex- 'sandwich shop and he had not The Modern - Jazz Quartet dates perimenters in structuring a new: been asked for any identification Ifrom 1951 when four ex-members kind of music. ;of the Dizzy Gillespie band as- The MJQ has .made four Euro-'ar proof °f age i seinbled in a New York studio pean tours in the lust five years' !for a recording session. They.and has recently completed a Fall have since played together Ire- Eastern tour of Japan. Australia, quently and have become estab-and New Zealand. In the Unite& Ifished as one of the most popular , States, the group has played oni Ismail ensembles in jazz. :the concert stage as well as ins such nightclubs as the Black' hawk in San Francisco and the Village Vanguard in New York. - FINGER ExmasE STAGE 5 MIGHT New College Diner 03" Wawa Bo•tvoeon the MoVir't iFteshrnan Fined :FOT Buying Beer BIKE REPAIRS PARTS ACCESSORIES Western Auto Saturfaeticra Guaranteed 200 W. College Ave. AD 74992 PAGE - THREE