Daily Collegian Monday, July 18, 1977 Crowds on the Allen Street mall meander in a snakelike path among the booths. ev rcx l / 4 0 c e la N fa No. oeio 00001,0% 90, s ex G ‘e . e eco : - ar o ... Its; , e‘e c ` 6 Ot e ' (o 0 v 4% toe osee V% v , tot se ,Aes , 00 VaVs - tS• ‘' 0 0 4 .0 e eio ei 90 STATE COLLEGE: Hills Plaza Monday - Saturday 10-9 1.99 - 2.49 yd. 2.99 yd. 3.99 yd. 4.49 - 4.99 yd. REMNANTS Doubleknit and woven fabrics in solids, prints and geometrics. NI . it .1: Nib' . , it ! , ... r ". ; ' • 1. 0 : +, iViiii r I ~ Photo by Linda Hart From the , blues to the Beer Barrel Polka, street musicians delighted Arts Festival crowds. NOW REG 1.22 yd. 1.88 yd. 2.22 yd. 2.66 yd. 50% OFF Sale effective through Saturday, July 23 FABRICS Festival flock undaunted by rain By STEVE LESTER Of course, the rain did not cause everybody to leave. Collegian Staff Writer By nightfall, some artists 'seemed to have forgotten For some people, yesterday's downpour brought an about it as they summed up their thoughts on the past early . end to the 11th Annual Central Pennsylvania week's events. Festival of the Arts. "It was very nice. We enjoyed the people here; "We just packed up and left after the third time we they're so lovely," said the wife of Sandor Herskovitz, a New York pipemaker. Smiling, she shrugged and covered everything," jeweler Constance E. Wicklund ad said. ded, "The heat you couldn't help." -"I think it probably shortened the festival because a Mildred Dienstag, a painter from New York, said her lot of people left early. I would've stayed until nine only regret was that she did not arrive a week early and o'clock but my body just couldn't take the elements," could not leave a week she said. . "I love the place," late. she said. "I'm a real, college ...EVERYTHING FOR SEWING: , 9morhateicAllo maslet charge ' Monday, July 18 Registration for second session of HUB craft classes, 12-5 p.m., Room 312 HUB. Classes start 7:30 p.m., tonight. Color Slide Club meeting. Special competition, slides depicting melancholy; showing • of Eastman Kodak Co. film "Making Color Prints," 7:30 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Nittany Mountain Summer Spectrum, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, •8 p.m., Eisenhower Auditorium. Tuesday, July 19 College of Education faculty luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Room 101 Kern. Acoustics Seminar. M. K. Bull, University of Adelaid, on "Noise Generation Due to Fully Developed Turbulent Flow in Pipes," 4 p.m., Room 151 Willard. Shaver's Creek Nature. Center, "Frogs, Toads, and Snakes," 7 p.m., Stone Valley. Integrational Summer Community Lecture. Herbert A. deVries, Mobile Laboratory for Physiology of Exercise and Aging Research, University of Southern California, and Lawrence J. Frankel, Lawrence Frankel Foundation, on "Physical Fitness in Middle and Later Life," 7:30 p.m., Keller Auditorium. Festival Theatre, A Little Night Music, 8 p.m., Playhouse Theatre. EXHIBITS • Frost Entomology Museum: special gypsy moth exhibit. Hammond Gallery: scholastic poster designs based on new CPFA logo; winning entries in CPFA poetry competition. HUB Gallery: Smithsonian Institution exhibit, "American Coverlets;" CPFA children's art exhibit. Kern Commons Gallery: Denise Lauzier Stone, ceramics. Zoller Gallery: Antonio Frasconi, woodcuts, lithographs and intaglios Rosin up the bow A University student, a recent graduate and Clayton "Red" Edwards, above, finished in the money Saturday as 17 fiddlers from all over the state gathered on Old Main lawn for the third annual fiddlers contest. Tad Marks (11th-music composition) won third place and $5O while Bruce Young, last year's third-place winner, finished fourth for a $25 prize, Blaine Shover from McVeytown, Pa., won the $lOO first prize for the second straight year while Edwards, from Muncy, Pa., received second place and $75. - The spirits of the wildly enthusiastic crowd were hardly dampened by a cloudburst near the end of the contest. campus freak and this area is so beautiful." She gave much praise for the way the festival was organized and publicized. "Even the shuttle bus was a joy." A State College jeweler who asked to remain anonymous said she was "disappointed" because she thought some of the jewelry in certain booths was not handmade. "They were just giving the people what they wanted because what they could afford were commercial items," she said. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Monday - Tuesday, July 18-19 SPECIAL EVENTS Photo by Patrick Little