TUESDAY. MAY 22. 19621 TODAY ON CAMPUS • • w, and '; Views I New and Views, the College of Horne Economics magazine is on sale this week at the Hetzel Union de& an 4 in Home EC. The theme of this issue is "Creativity." Concert . th Spring Concert of the n Chapel Choirs,' con ! y James W. Beach, will Lat 8 p.m. in the Helen senhower chapel. The F" , Meditati ducted be held F.akin E Spectrum Spectrum; the engineering and architecture magazine, is on sale today at the HUB desk and the chemistry - physics, engineering and architecture libraries. Panhel The Panhellenic ,Council will discuss and vote on proposals for the 1962 Greek Week events at its meeting], at 6:30 p.m: 41.203' HUB. The council will also vote on whethei, or not to support a float parade . an Homecoming Weekend and discuss the proposed rush code for next year. Eol6ach Receives 4our,'naiism.Award David Bolbach, journalism ma-i jor efroin Lancasterand a city editor of The Daily Collegian, was ; named the most protnising sopho-I more by the Penn State chapter , of Sigma Delta Chi, men's pro' fessional journalism society, at the initiation meeting Sunday at ti* Nittany Lion Inn. , The award was a $3O check. Sigma Delta Chi initiated six new Members at this meeting: Melvin Axilbund, Bolbach, Robert KilbOrn, William McCann, Ste phen Monheimer "and Robeh Zel nick: You CAN WIN ._,'4d„„-„al STEREO THEATRE COMBINATION SECOND PRIZE "Interlude" STEREO HI-FI . "4 -Speed Portable PHONOGRAPH e Prizes at G. c. MURPHY STORE 127 S. Allen Street. State College, Pa.) IN EMPTY PACKS TOMORROW I to ,5 P.M. . C3LLEGIAN OFFICE TURN • An. Student Groupe ein enter • Who wins: Student group, fraternity, or dormitory submitting( the greatest Ouinber of packs per-eapita. For eximple Group A consisting of 10' members and turning in 10,000 packages, or 4000 packages per student• would be de direct the winner over Group B consisting of 10 members turning iin 10,000 ',packages, or 900 per student. , First.and secon' 4 prise will be awarded to the group turning in the first and .. . c second largest nturnbers of packs per-capita. retrectirel7- • I • Only Lanky Strike, Pall Mall, and Dual Filter Tareyten parks. accepted. • — poi l eks must _be bound together ,witb String In bundles of twenty and_ groups ' seine must be written or imprinted on the bark of the package. •Al packs beeetrat ,the property of els :Anterkaa Tobacco Co. IPf nners will be notified after close of contest. • eln event of tie, an additional. similar. tie-breaking easiest will be bell at Which time the group submitting the (neatest number of packs pencapits will kmel determined the winners • Empty packs must be returned at ths **COLLEGIAN"' OFTICS • fkaaemesit et fish:tett/ on WEDNESDAY, MAY 23.' 62, from 1:44 p.m. to 1:06 p.m. No 4 will be accepted after this i ! -• Other Meetings ciety, 213 HUB Agriculture Council, 7 p.m..217 Schuhplatters, 8 p.m., 215 Wagner . HUB - Sophomore Class Advisory Board, 7 p.m.. 215 HUB Liberal party, 8:30 p.m., 218 HUB T ax Seminar, 1-5 p.m., HUB As- Office of Student Aid, 8 p.M., 212 sembiy room. HUB USG- Public Relations Agency, 7 Penn •State .Science Fiction So- p.m., 214 HUB , Schulman to Select 90 Stu - dents For Encampment at Mont •Alto A select group of outstanding' Student leaders is the aim of lifelvin Schulman, Encimpmerit i thairman, for the 1962 Fall En 4mpment, to be held Sept. 12-14 at the Mont Alto Center. Applications are now available] at the Hetzel Union desk and are ] due Friday. From the applications received, 90 students will be cho-1 sen to attend, SchUlman Thirty members of the faculty, and administration will also be' ?n attendance, he said. He explained; thta there. will' probably be a ratio of 2-I, men to, women. The reason for this is that, there are two - residence' halls at Mont • Alto, one which houses 74 (where, men will stay) and the other which houses 36 (where the), women will reside for the three-I day period). FIVE WORKSHOPS will be held •at , which' various student Veon Named '62 Editor Dorothy H. Veon, profeoor of education, is the editor for , the 1962 Yearbook. for American Business Education, published by the National Business Teachers Association and the Eastern Busi ness Teachers Association. . The yearbook directs its atten tion to business education with a future, incorporating trends evidenced by changes in man power, technology and curricu7 23 " • TV *2IIIIEO FM/AM MONO RADIO PLUS • newSTEREO FM RADIO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK PENNSYLVANIA Tareyton t 2 • • i problems- ,w ill be discussed. Recommendations from the work shops will be made concerning University policies in the coining year, Topics for discussion within the workshops include . on-c ampus probleins i off- c ampus problems, the judicial system, the four-term system,'- 'and the. Undergraduate Student ,Government. Schulman said the worksMp chairmen will be named by the end of this wee)c, and encamp ment applicants -, will be inter viewed probably the latter part of next week. 'IN PLANNING the affair, busk ness manager Paul McPherson will be working under the USG allocated budget - of $l,OOO. - Last year Encampment was' held at University Park in order, to allow more students to attend. f Business Yearbook lum improvement. It will be re leased May 20. Leete to House hg Library The main part of the Agricul tural Library, now housed in Pat terson, will be moved to the base ment of Leete this summer, italph W. McComb, University librarian, said recently. The move is due to planned re modeling' of Patterson. .1 , 1 4 on the Bob Napier Trio Everyone *Also: election of officers Members bring membership cards Student Kills Snake Near Whipple's Dam One voyager to Whipple's en-; countered more than pleasure Sunday night when he came face-i to face with a 3-foot rattlesnake.'. Gerald , Logue, senior in engi-i veering science from Parker, was driving home slowly from a nic in the Whipple's area when he. heard the snake; "strike against; the side of the car." "The window 'was open and' when I heard the thump, I thought, it might 'be a snake," he said.' Logue said that when he heard ; ' the noise, he stopped the car, got, out, picked up a stick and stunned! the snake with the stick. "Then. I cut off its head with machete which I had used to cut Wood at the picnic," he said. 1. Logue said that the snake was apparently a young one because of its uhusually 'short length and because' it only had eight rattles. He said that he took the rattle snake home in the trunk of his tanguage Programs Discussed A major effort must be made to ing Materials and language labo install long-term language courses,ratories. in elementary and high schools. , ence is a sinking •• The very tartv.r of this confer ,illiam B. Edgerton. Chairman o f , indication- of the Indiana University Deparl- the rapid growth of Russian In 1 ment of Slavic Languages, told a. I Pennsvivania and the nation," 'conference of Penns y 1 v a nia IT,homas F. Magner, professor lot Teachers of Russian on Saturday.lllussian and director of the con "ln the Soviet Union students, ference said. spend Isix years of study on one "Ten years ago Russian was language." Edgerton said. "This,t atig n t on l y in the major univer country is lagging , behind others/iMies. Today it is spreading rapid in making language learning avail-ly and is how taught in 50 high able to students in Its educational schools and practicall3 , alt the systems," he added. rrolleges in Pennsylvania," he said. ... The conference. which was spon-t The University has one '-of the cored by the Department of Slavic largest Russian enrollments:— 300 Languages included panel discus- students in' the country, he Isions :and demonstrations on ele-ladded. This is greater than many In ent a r y and post-elementary i of the major universities, Magnet: Ilevelsiand special reports on teach-'said. %r oe Ac 9 O t 461 is y se 4.r 0 Co e u j V 7 41 ' 4 O ‘l5 0 0 4 ;‘ (3°‘› S t \ I. . l'ic T' c p HUB Terrace an case of rain: the HUB Ballroom featuring invited in to sit car and later skinned it. The only problem; now, he said is what to do with the skin in order to keep it. Logu6 said that he tried th* meat yesterday and .added that "it tasted pretty good." He said that - it was the first snake that he had ever killed and he has also kept the rattles. Fred B. Lonberger. ranger In the Bear Meadows section. said that rattlesnakes are not common around Whipple ' s. He said that snakes come down from Greenlee Mountains because of the hot weather. "We ordinarily see only one snake every two or three years," he said." and we are more apt to see them in July or August.", Another ranger, commenting on the snake situation, said that the area around Whipple's wits -rattle snake country" but that it was ''nothing to be alarmed about." PAGE FIVE NEM