THURSDAY. APRIL 19.1962 TODAY ON CAMPUS Applications Applications-.for the Undergrad tOte 'Student • Government Su preme Court, are available at the Ifetzel Union desk. No student judicial -experience Is necessary , but the' applicant znuat have a good understanding of campus affairs, USG President Dennis Poianini 'said. j Applicationi for Freshman Cis- i Board are now available at the HUB desk, All second -and third-term freshmen are eligible. Applications must be returned to the HUB desk by Tuesday. Miss Penn State Contest appli cations are available at the HUB desk. Applications, plus a 5 by 7 inch picture of the applicants, Must be returned to the HUB desk by tomorrow. ' • AWS Quesiiiimnaire The AWS rules .revision ques tionnaire is now available at the HUB desk for-all interested•wom -4n students who have.. not re ceived one in the mail. S O'Clock Theater "Love on. a Park Bench," writ en by Dianne Lamb, junior in ournalism from Arlington, Va., t ßusAd Professois To 0 Advise Sophs A. convocation to help . sopho mores in business administration Choose' their majors, will 'be held :this - afternoon in Boucke. Al though the convocation is spon `sore& by the colleges -Student Council, students in the division' to f counseling who plan to trans • ler- into' business administration are also invited, Philip Steinhauer, chairman said yesterday. -Atcounting, economics, com merce! and management depart ment heads will speak to the con vocation from 2:30 to 3 =p.m. in 214 Boucke, he said. Talks on each Major field will be 'giiien at 3 p.m.' in the follow ing rooms in Boucke: accounting, 214; economics, 217; finance, 208; Insurance . and real estate, 209; management, 207; marketing, 202; 'and trade and transportation, 303. Caid Weather Predicted: Today should be mostly , cloudy and cool ' with a few *holsters likelyl during the afternoon and evening. A high of 50 is expected. Snow flurries, showers, windy and colder weather• are indicated for.tonight. The low will be near 32'. degrees. New:Coliege.Diner. Do 9town%j3 , ::lv.:E.T . n. .tito.vies ~. . . You are cordially invited to enjoy the famous Personal Service, that lifcCrory'4, - . -'' now brings to' the State College - - area. - , . , • :latialityMerchandiseat.PricesYou'ilLike ' , e A full line Of student supplies , ' •. Ladies' and : men's clothing , 4 - Furniture and electrical appliance!, .. „ie. A complete department store at ybur fingertips PLUS EASY, EASY CREDIT OPEN NON. - SAT. 10 A.M. 10 0 P.M. • , .... ... C M , .. " UNIVERSITY PARE PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER - W. HAMILTON ST. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNNERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA will be 'presented by the 5 O'Cloric Theatre at 5:15 today in the base ment of Old Main. The play is directed by David Griffiths,. freshman in business administration from Ridgewood, N.J. • Attitude Survey Students wishing to express their opinions qn ' the University, faculty, courses and other, is sues may participate in the Stu-, dent Attitude Survey at • 7 p.m. in 119 Osmond. Students who can not attend either session may call' UN • 5-8350, extension 28, to be scheduled for another time to complete the survey. Meetings Ast Hitt Pstty committee. 1:$I Pau, IV Chemistry Colloquium. 12:10 p.m., 302 Whitmore Faculty Bridge. 7:30 p.m.. 212 HUB Gamma Sigma Sigma executive eoctimit- Wei, 11:20 .p.m.. 216 112111 • Gamma Sign* Sigma Pledßis. I D•m.. 201 Atinabi - International Films, 3, T and 3 p.m.. HUB assembly room Marketing Club, Pf Kappa Phi • llechankail Engineering Seminar, $:53 p.m., 105 Mechanical Engiromring Office of Student Aid. "I a-at. to 5 p.m., 211 RUB bait TIM &dying le►sona, • 1:10 p.m.. HUB r ovrAlrovVtatEturPttamz,tno! IIERLOCHER'S SUPPER SPECIAL -1 / 4 lg. Bar-B-Clued Chicken . , Choice of Salad & Soft Drink • . Choice of Apple Pie or Cheese:Cake • Served Tees, Thins., Sat. 4:30-T P.M Call AD 8-0518' Delivery After 4:30 • :g. , 04,4%, Passover Honors Ex 'cklus Jewish people the world over are currently celebrating the Passover, which is held annually to commemorate the Israelites' exodus into the wilderness from ,slavery - in Egypt 1 PASSOVER BEGAN last nigh l at sundown and will continue until Wednesday at sundown. touringl these seven , days. the Jewish people will fast by not eating leavened bread. Their fast mg reminds them that their an cestors • ate unleavened bread during . the -exodus. The Seders, the evening meals of the first two days of Passover, are symbolic of the flight from the bonds of slavery. The father is seated at the head of the table and his family is gathered around him. He leads the traditional cereklVonies at the meals. Finch 'lmproved' Dr. Henry A. Finch. Profes sor of philosophy, who sul-' fokiNi a stroke 'Tuesday after noon was reported in a "some what improved" condition by the doctor in charge of his case hut night. It will be about 10'days be fore the full extent and the results of the stroke will be known. the doctor said. nr.:1,54%,mr.we55..4=6. lUMI Before - each person is placed a plate with three flat cakes of unleavened bread. Nearby is a dish which holds a portion of the shoulder of the shank bone of a lamb with only a small amount of meat on it. Also on the dish is peeled egg. On a third plate are bitter herb; and on the forth is Charoseth p a paste made of nuts, apples, raisins and spices of!various kinds. Each dish has a particular sig nificance of some part of the exodus. The number of cakes— three--represents the three na CRAM COURSE NO. 2: BIOLOGY The grisly shadow of final exams looms over us, to today in this column instead of merry quips and homely saws, you will find hard facts—quick cram courses to help you through the ordeal ahead. Lag week I gave you a,rapid survey of Modern Etimialut History. Now let us turn to Biology. Biology is divided into several phyla, or classes. First is the protozoa, or one-celled animal. All life stems from the one• celled animal. Over a apace of millions of years, life slowly evolved until today we have animals with as many se 12 cells. Some larger mammals claim they have 14 to 16 cells, but your know how larger mammals lie. ' The second clam of animals is the periphem a shadowy category that borders often on the vegetable. Take, for example , , the sponge. The sponge is definitely an animal. The washcloth, on the other hand, is definitely not. Next we come to the arthropiala, or insects. Moat , of course, find insects fairly repulsive—and yet, if one wilt look, there is exquisite; beauty in the insect world. Who does not remember the lovely insect poems of William - Cullen Sigafoos—such enchanting lyrics as Tumbling Along with the Tumbling Tumbkbug, Fly Gently; Sweet Aphid, and Gnats My Mother Taught Me. Mr. Sigafoos has been inactive since the invention of DDT. Our nett, category is the molluscs,—lobsters, shrimp, and the like. Lobsters are generally found under rocky projection. on the ocean bottom. Shrimp are Kenenally found in a circle around a small bowl containing cocktail sauce. Marlboro Cig arettes are generally fOund at any tobacco counter or vending machine. What have Marlboro Cigarettee got to do with biologyt Well, actually, not very much. It must be remembered, how• ever, that the= makers of Marlboro pay me for writing this column, and they are inclined to get surly if I fail to mention their product. Mind you, I enjoy Ringing the praises of Marlboro—and so will you once you try that flavorful tobacco, that fine filter which lets the flavor come through undiminished. It is a great pleasure to smoke Marlboros and a great pleasure to write about them, but sometimes, I must confess, I find it a bit difficult to work the commercial into the column. Some yew* ago, for example i l did a piece about Alexander the Great. and, believe you me, it took a heap of stretching to drop . its a plug for Marlboro. The way I finally managed it was to have Alexander go to the Oracle at Delphi and say, "Oracle, I hare conquered the world and tasted all its pleasure's, but somehow I am not content. I know that somewhere there must he a joy I have not yet experienced." To which the Oracle replied, 46 . 1 a, "Yea, Alexander, there is latch a joy, but, alas, the time is not yet. I refer to Marlboro Cigarettes which will pot be invented for another 2501 years." Whereupon Alexander fell into a sulk . liven which he never recovered ...IrVell sir, there is no question I sold a lot of cigarettes with this ingenious commercial, but the gang down at the American Academy of Arts and Letters gave me a mighty good razzing, you may be sure. But I digress. Back to biology, and the most advanced phylum of all—the chordate, or vertebrate*. There are two de of vertebrates—those whose backbones run horizontally and those whose backbones run vertically. Generally, there - to no great difficulty in distinguishing the two varieties. A fish, for instance, hasa horizontal backbone, and a man has a vertical backbone. Occasionally, however, you run into a problem—like a - fish who swims upright and a man who spends most of his time in the sack. Haw, in such a case, do you tell one from another? Science xtruegkd with this sticky question for cen turies, but finally Siesta"' of M.I.T. came up with a brilliantly simple answer. Offer the creature a Marlboro. If it is a fish, it will refuse. If it is Homo sapiens, it will accept. In fact, the more sapient, the quicker the acceptance. • • IWO 14•• 9..5.... The makers of Marlboro, upright sartebrates all, remind you that their tins cigarettes are available in pack or boa . ) wherever cigarettes ant sold in any of the SO states. tional divisions: priest, Levitt* Israelites. . The shank bone represents the lamb which was slain by the Israelites on the 14th of Nizan (the first month of the Hebrew year). THE HEBREW PEOPLE put the slain lamb's blood on their doors so the angel that God sent to kin the firstborn in every Egyptian home could differentiate bet*eetr the homes. The angel would "pass over" the Israelite dwellings. The bitter herbs are a reminder of the bitter days of slavery in Egypt. On t- matt= Iltairf t "Mt lit '' . Loves of De ' ... of "I Was a Tostrage .., s ) Dellis Gillisic. PAGt FIVE 'MR
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers