The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 22, 1963, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
Student
• • - tj
Services
By ILAINE RUGIENIUS gram at the Laurelton State
Happiness, is knowing that School and .Hospital a pro
someone cares . . . security is gram in which University stu
belonging. dents play an important part.
This thought characterizes The school-hospital, an insti
the goals of the volunteer pro- tution for mentally retarded
FLY JET TO EUROPE THIS SUMMER!
Only $250 Round Trip
For members of the National Collegiate Club and
their immediate families only. The ONLY charter
flight at Penn State with no necessary number of
Penn Staters to fill seats . . .
THIS MEANS DEPENDABILITY!!
For club and flight information call
Peter Roth at AD 8-1218
HILLEL EVENTS
Friday, November 22nd
Friday Night Services 8:00 P.M.
Sunday, November 24th
Lox and Bagel Brunch 11:00 A.M.
Monday, November 25
The Hillel Hour—WMAJ 6:30 P.M.
YOUR MONEY ...
NICKELODEON
(and if you don't have the Sc, our doorman just might
let you in for 2 Deniyne wrappers, an "I Like Ike"
button and a Ginkgo leaf... so don't stay away broke)
Saturday, Nov. 23 9-12 HUB Ballroom
The HUB Social Committee
Fly Allegheny home for Thanksgiving and get more than a quarter
back... on the price of your round-trip ticket. You get .a third
back, in feet, on our Group Travel plan* You get closer to a half
back by flying both ways on Saturdays or Sundays. Our Charter
Service is another way to save. So, at 38 points in the. Middle Atlantic
States and New England, Allegheny makes the airport a great money
backfield. And our touchdowns are perfectly timed.
*M about our FREE tickets for group organizers.
Low Group Travel fare, for example:
Round-trip to New York (Newark) $25.00 plus tax.
Call your travel agent or ADams 8-8414
MimnYwim
YOUR AIR COMMUTER SERVICE IN 12 BUSY STATES
TONITE 8-12:30 Waring Lounge
Organizations Provide Varied
for Laurelton School-Hospital
WE WANT
but, gosh, it’s only
a nickel—sc—to
come to our big,
once-in-a-Termtime
WEST BALLS’
RECORD HOP
NITE
???????????????
- The HUB Special Events Committee 0
77" Will give away a
f SPECTACULAR f. o
GYGnskitnvhruealKT
? ? ?
«, ...
WEDNESDAY
Nov. 27 between 1 and 3 p.m.
In HUB Lion's Den
«'• (unscramble it and you’ll know)
i l 1111111111 l l l
So you're
flunking
Geology 20,
Relax, you can
Ace Hopology 101
at the-
women of child bearing age,
is administered by the state
welfare • department. Up to
1,000 students can be accom
modated at the hospital, lo
cated on Rt. 45 in Union County
about three miles east of Hairy
John’s Park.
Prepare for Return
Laurelton prepares its stu
dents to return to their com
munities, fulfill positions of
responsibility, and become self
supporting.
From admission until dis
charge, students receive many
services from the various de
partments of the school, includ
ing social services, occupational
therapy, recreation, education,
medical and health assistance,
and others.
According to Rose M. Co
logne, chairman of the division
of home management and com
munity relations at the Uni
versity, college students ac
tually started the type of
volunteer program that Uni
versity students now i conduct
under the supervision of Lau
relton’s volunteer department.
Place to Learn
“College is a wonderful place
to learn education for public
responsibility and these stu
dents are doing well,” Miss
Cologne said.
The relatively-new volunteer
program is under the Under
graduate Student Government
Service committee, which
helps coordinate trips of Uni
versity students to Laurelton.
The hospital lacks sufficient
funds to provide its own trans
portation, according to Mrs.
Dorothy Blacklock, chairman
of volunteer service.
Volunteer activities there are
diversified.
Student volunteers conduct
THE RECORD ROOM announces its
Annual Christmas Offer! We'll Wrap
and Mail any record anywhere In
this country at No Extra Cost! Select
your record gilt now and the Record
Room in the Campus Shopping Cen
ter will wrap It and send it In plenty
of time for Chrlstmasl
Hi-way
WmMB
SHOPPE
111 Hiesfer St. Across from Atherton Hal!
NOW OPEN TO SERVE YOU
THE FINEST ITALIAN STYLE PIZZA
MADE FRESH DAILY
$ 15c per cut
or Two cuts for a Quarter ®
CHEESE and PEPPERONI on ALL CUTS
Open 4 p.m. till ? Phone AD 8-9451
The Right Price, Quality and Service
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
social programs in the cottages,
supervised by the University’s
recreation and institutional
living departments. These ac
tivities include ' basketball
games, dance band perform
ances, and treasure hunts.
Some women’s residence hall
groups have entertained Lau
relton students on campus in
their living unit lounges.
Some of the parents of stu
dent volunteers carry on this
service in the summer, Mrs.
Blacklock added.
Outings. Sports
Student group volunteer
services usually include out
ings and entertainment, cot
tage socials and team sports.
Other services are shopping,
reading to students, prepara
tion of materials for occupa
tional therapy and clerical as
sistance.
Alpha Phi Omega, national
service fraternity, has collect
ed used clothing and jewelry
and has also provided favors
on certain occasions.
Mrs. Blacklock said she
thinks the “regular” projects
are of great value. These pro
grams consist of music and
entertainment, sports and so
cial evenings.
She expressed hqpe for an
experimental plan in which
fraternity groups might be able
to organize dance projects un
der the direction of the recrea
tion department. •
Weighs Suggestions
The school often seriously
considers suggestions from stu
dent volunteers as they become
familiar with various projects.
■ About 20 student groups, in
cluding residence councils, re
ligious organizations, social
fraternities and sororities, serv
ice organizations and independ
ent groups have participated in
the Laurelton volunteer service
programs/
For Good Results
Use
Collegian Classifieds
Summer Jobs
Guaranteed Jobs in Germany
for Qualified Students
Register Now! Limited Openings Many Applicants
Sfaie-BuMuL 116 W. College Ave.
7 A A\i,'?,/"j ■ 'v:%y4iV''Wtpwy/;%
allons du cinema
You Can. Have 'Take Her —lt's Yours
By VINCE YOUNG
Collegian Reviewer
“Take Her, She’s Mine” is the
film that started turning- 20th
Century-Fox’ dusty cameras a
new last spring after Darryl
Zanuck removed Spyros Skour
as from the' throne following a
few years of some violently in
the-red statistics.
And this, supposedly, is the
type of production that Zanuck
would like to hack off the as
sembly line twice a month to
shoo contented families away
from their TV sets and into the
17,500 flicker palaces that dot
the nation.
Now what would be a better
choice for rejuvenating the box
office than one of those saccha
rine dollops of goo, those fam
ily-type entertainments, to which
any God-fearing parent would
gladly shell out $2 per capita,
$3 per baby-sitter, sl.p£r park
ing space?
To be sure, “Take Her” is di
rected by Henry (“Mr. Hobbs
Takes A Vacation”) Koster, and
stars James Stewart and Sandra
(“Tammy Tell Me True,”
“Tammy and The Doctor”) Dee.
Bubbly Blond
Here, Miss Dee is a bubbly,
blond, nubile teenager who goes
Soviet Students-
(Continued from page three)
rather disturbed me, while
talking to students at Moscow
University. It was the lack of
information, or at least the
lack of readily available in
formation, that the students
had about the outside world.
Plea For Books
It is most unfortunate when
a graduate student in history
working on a thesis has to
plead for books representing
a non-Communist or anti
communist point of view be
cause such books are not
available through the regular
library channels.
They can be obtained only
illegally since the Soviet post
office would not forward such
books. Of the English lan
guage newspapers I noticed
that the (Communist) Daily
Worker was available at
many newsstands in Moscow
while The New York Times,
for example, could be ob
tained (so far as I was able
to determine) only in the
Lenin Library in downtown
Moscow, and even there one
had to wait some 20 minutes
to get it from the shelf, pro
vided, of course, that one had
a permit to go to the Library
in the first place.
.-:.:ii,:-:,:....:.
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FREE MOVIE
the Japanese film classic
RASHO-MON
SUNDAY EVENING, NOV 24
121 SPARKS 7-9 P.M.
PRESENTED BY WEST HALLS COUNCIL
GOODYEAR O.D.PAR
RAINCOAT
• Full hood with adjustable
drawstring ;
• Knee length—3B"long n
'•Full zipper front f
• Waterproof |
• Heavy rubber coated I
• Three flap pockets [
fEill> smll .•-Vjji
.Small (34—3t>
Hiiis«i<3l-M) FOR GUYS M .1
lirn(M-M) m %
, AtMJlJ«liir|iiiiM»llir.piiti|»Slilit4li«f, HV 'I
Ki I V s Satilfntloa lumoiiii it mgaij liluadil U■ . j
RsJ %■* n .
Be? sr € $ 2<- '
HI for oais t-1 S*nd money wd«ror cheek wllb ordor ta-JI& \
Ti| ' Peretz &Co.,lnc. dept.’ M
BROADWAY.NEW YORK, N.Y. 1000!
• Work in restaurants, hotels, youth hos
tels, hospitals, farms
• Receive German social
covers all medical hills
• Live with a
and hoard
• Earn 1.80-2.80 DM per hour
This will support you during the summer. All you need
is a plane ticket!!!
to a college where the kids still
say “scubee doo!” Expelled af
ter a censorship/Henry Miller
rally, she enters a Parisian in
stitution where the kids .still do
Le Tweest.
Her parents, Stewart and Au
drey Meadows, are less concern
ed about the fact that Dee and
her peers are probably several
light years behind Penn State,
than about her inevitable seduc
tion.
So, Stewart plows through a
period of what are usually term
ed Raw Emotions; but just be
fore the final fade-out, Dee runs
off and gets happily married to
a Frenchman with one dimple,
all to prove that, as always,
Father Knows Naught.
“The Wheeler Dealers”
Wheeler dealers are either
people who wheel deals or ones
who deal wheels, depending on
where you’re from. Anyway, The
Film With The Funny Title, is an
amiable affair that, when not be
ing funny, is a super-satire.
It satirizes: Texas, Texans,
modern art, modern artists, mo
dern art reviews, Wall Street,
New England, public relations
experts, public relations imbe
ciles, and courtrooms.
3'Contractors Bid
On PSU Projects
HARRISBURG (AP) - The
General State Authority reported
yesterday it has received unof
ficial low bids for two projects
at The Pennsylvania State Uni
versity.
A total of $1,592,267 was bid
for construction of an extension
conference center. Gamble Con
struction Co., Boliver, was low
bidder on general construction
and Herre Brothers, Inc., Harris
burg, was low on heating, plumb
ing, and electrical work.
John F. Miles Co., Kulpmont,
was unofficial low bidder for
heating and ventilation work at
a new earth sciences building.
The bid was for $444,999.
NEW COLLEGE DINER
Downtown Between the Movies
ALWAYS OPEN
- BICYCLE -
PARTS
REPAIRS • ACCESSORIES
Western Auto
112 S. FRAZIER ST.
in Europe
security which
family-full room
German
When Texas tycoon James
Garner lands in New York to
wheel some fancy, seven-digit
deals, he immediately buys a
taxicab and ,its driver, and,
within a few moments, is telling
stock analyst Lee Remick how
pretty her eyes are. Naturally,
Remick sells him some stock in
Universal Widget Corporation.
(Widgets are used in the con
struction of flying clippers, but,
unfortunately, went out even be
fore high-button shoes.)
ATTENTION
NEWMAN CLUB MEMBERS
YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND
A POST-GAME PARTY AT THE
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
NEWMAN CLUB
8 p.m. Saturday
125 N. Craig St. in Pittsburgh
i 1
| SUCCESS OR FAILURE j
I Sermon by j
j REV. WILLIAM A. WATSON j
j 10:00 a.m. Discussion Seminars j
| Wesley Foundation j
I Worship Service j
j Sunday, Nov. 24, 9:IS a.m. ]
| Tuesday, Nov. 26—7:00 A.M. j
| Matins followed by breakfast j
I , Thursday, Nov. 28—7:30 P.M. I
| Holy Communion j
I 256 E. College Ave. j
i i
a. ~ ■! -rr“Tn n—tr —i m nmnrw n!■ n ihiiwii n n ani n 11*1
/SMART SANTAS ,
"Wrf •
... and they shop at Nittany News for
those “Special Gifts” ... games, in
expensive art books, and hardbound
books. Also see the new line of unusual
Christmas cards.
Nittany News Book Shop
Next to the Corner Room
JIM'S
Army-Navy
S. Allen St. (the top thereof)
i
Slim Cut Corduroys ..... $3.98
(In any color as long as it's ian, black or green)
Western Wrangler Jeans .... $3.98
Men's and Women's Free Alterations
(complete with bowlegs)
Sweatpants... Men’s $2.98, Boys’ $1.99
(or for anyone else sweating finals)
P.G.B.’s Men’s and Women’s. . $4.98
Just Arrived
(P.G.R.'s? Why pea green raincoats, what else?)
Low Gut Delt Jackets $15.95
(for formal occasions)
Rubber Hunting Boots $4.98
Insulated Yellow, Green, Red
(be a colorful hunier)
Work Shoes $4.98 & up
(last chance to impress your prof before finals)
Nylon Pullover Shells $5.98
Ice Skates $14.98
Men’s Dick Button’s sizes 6-13
Women’s Carol. Heiss sizes 6-12.
(people who take size 14 or over, forget It.
Why don't'you try skJ : ng?)
Hanes T-Shirts and Briefs 79c
slightly I.R.
(there's a difference between
I.R. and used, you know) /
t
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1963
Directed by a relative new
comer to Hollywood, Arthur Hil
ler, “Dealers,” in spite of ter
rific odds, dishes out a few
chuckles, yowls, and yocks here
and there. The only trouble is
that it’s all very tried-and-true
by now. It has that touch of
mink glow of Ross Hunter,
those familiar MGM sets, the sit
uations of “Pillow Talk,” anti
even has one of the more mem
orable lines from "Some Like
It Hot.”