THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1940 Buildings Will Open Wilh Only 45 Per Cent Of Equipment Installed (Continued from page 1) ture. In that case, administrative and student activity offices will probably use the vacated space in Old Main. Offices in the Liberal Arts Building have been occupied by the dean’s staff, English composi tion department, English litera ture, and other departments in the Liberal Arts School. The old Eng lish Composition Building has been converted into a home man agement house for the use of the department of home economics. The $300,000 Burrowes Build ing, designed to house the School of Education, was dedicated on August 1. Most offices are still in the old structure but prepara tions are being made to move them in the near future. At present, no formal dedica tion ceremonies are planned for any of the other buildings. Three agriculture buildings Forestry, Agricultural Engineering, and Frear Laboratory (Agricultural Science)—will be informally dedi cated at brief cermonies held in connection'with other affairs. A housewarming for forestry alumni will be held on October 11 to mark the opening of the new Forestry Building. The Agricul tural Engineering Building will be dedicated in connection with a meeting of the Pennsylvania Farm Machinery Dealers Association on November 13 and 14. Ceremonies at Frear Laboratory will be held during a meeting of Pennsylva nia chemists. This date has not yet been set. The Electrical Engineering Building, sections of which were in use last year, will be used in its entirety. The 11 new buildings bring to a total of 13 'the structures com pleted within the last two years. The other two buildings are Frances Atherton Hall, women’s dormitory, and Mary Beaver White Hall, ..women’s recreation building. The buildings completed under the GSA program and their costs of construction are: Liberal Arts, $460,000; Education, $300,000; Li brary, $450,000; Mineral Indus tries, $120,000; Chemistry and Physics, $800,000; Agricultural Engineering, $90,000; Electrical Engineering, $465,000; Frear Lab oratory, $575,000; Poultry, $90,- 000; Service, $25,000; and Fores try, $165,000. THE MUSIC ROOM WELCOMES YOU “COME IN AND GET ACQUAINTED” Largest Dance and Classical Record Stock In Central Pennsylvania • • Radio Service and Music Supplies GLENNLAND BUILDING DIAL 2311 i WELCOME '44 A Good Place fo Shop For Fresh Frails and Vegetables —is— McKEE'S MARKET “If It Grows We Have If' West ; Rea m r::; 4-Year-Old Government Institute Boasts Impressive Service Record Institute Secretary Prof. Harold F. Alderfer, a member of the political science department, is executive secretary of the Institute of Local Govern ment. His report on its rapid pro gress appears in. column three. College Admits Record Number of Transfers The College during 1939-40 ad mitted more transfer students and more graduate students than in any previous year, College Exam iner Carl E. Marquardt revealed today in his annual report to Pres ident Ralph b. Hetzel. The com bined total admitted was 1271. Transfer students, who had their credits transferred from other in stitutions, number 490. They came from 132 different colleges in 32 states and enrolled here in 37 diff erent undergraduate curricula. Three hundred of them were from Pennsylvania institutions. Graduate students enrolled at the College in 52 different majors, coming, from universities through out the country. Dr. Marquardt reported that 72 per cent of the 535 admitted held degrees from institutions other than Penn State. In addition, 166 students were ad mitted as general graduate stu dents and 80 as non-resident un dergraduates. University of California’s Davis campus has a new $325,000 library administration building. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Report By Alderfer Shows Rapid Progress Established four years ago as a wholly new feature in Pennsyl vania higher education, the Insti tute of Local Government of the College today can boast an impos ing line of services which benefit every municipality in the state. A four-year progress report, prepared by Prof. H. F. Alderfer, the executive secretary, revealed that the institute now edits and publishes official magazines for six separate local government or ganizations, besides sponsoring service meetings and clinics, train ing students for government serv ice, and keeping local officers posted on new ideas and methods. The magazines, having a com bined circulation of 5,800, are pub lished for the League of Cities, Pennsylvania Chiefs of Police As sociation, Borough Bulletin, Pro bation and Parole Officers, Town ship Commissioners, and County Commissioners. Three of these have been started since. January. In the field of clinics and meet ings, the institute sponsors annual meetings of city assessors and mu nicipal and local finance officers, and an annual traffic school and laboratory school for police offi cers. Students who have been grad uated in the public service major now hold posts in a number of federal and state departments, in cluding the U. S. Civil Service Commission and the State Depart ment of Internal Affairs. Others are employed by such groups as the Pennsylvania Economy League. In cooperation with the Insti tute of Local and State Govern ment, University of Pennsylvania, the institute distributes factual re ports on joint purchasing, man ager governments, and other stud ies, and is preparing a standard manual for Pennsylvania asses sors. The Penn State institute al so offers a correspondence course in accounting for the benefit of municipal officers. Summer Session Degrees Reflect College Growth Although less than a third as large as the June exercises, the recent summer session commence ment conferred 189 advanced de grees—which is as many as were awarded by the College during the first 48 years of its existence. The growth of the institution is reflected likewise in the number man. The 118 bachelor’s degrees says Registrar William S. Hoff man. The 118 bacehlor’s degrees awarded last month are only two less than the total given during the College’s first 22 years. Total degrees conferred during the year ending in July numbered 1670, the highest in the College’s history. Of these, 1157 were awarded at the June commence ment, 220 at the midyear gradua tion, and 293 at last summer’s ex ercises. We've No Bachgrowid For English, Prof Says Dr. Douglas S. Mead, professor of English literature, laments the fact that teachers are too husy studying other subjects to learn any Old English. When Johnnie asks such ques tions in school as “Who put the ,‘w’ in answer?”, “Why is the fem inine of fox vixen?”, “Why do we say sing-sang and not bring •brang?", his teacher probably tells him, “I didn’t make the English •language. Learn it as you find it.” Consequently, Johnnie must act through blind obedience rather •than thorough knowledge, Dr. Mead says. He believes this is an .unwholesome procedure and svjg-: gests that teachers and pupils alike, learn more about the history of College Registrar Registrar William S. Hoffman has had the job of selecting 1,575 members of the class of 1944 from almost twice that many applicants. He reports that the class is schol astically as well prepared as any ever entering the College. (A full report appears in the article on page one and below.) Record Freshman Class Will Boost Enrollment (Continued from page 1) ton, Dußois and Altoona. The cen ter previously operated at Union town has been abandoned after op erating with insufficient enroll ment last year. Applications this year were about 200 less than last year, to taling 2,654 on August 21 as com pared with 2,837 a year earlier. The ability of the students ac cepted, however, is as good as last year’s class which met the highest standards ever established by the College. Half of the freshmen were in the first fifth of their high school classes and 80 per cent were in the upper two-fifths. The decrease in applications was marked chiefly by a falling off in the lower scholarship brack ets. This group, Mr. Hoffman be lieves, is being absorbed into the spurting war industries. WELCOME, CLASS OF '44 • STORAGE •LUBRICATION • REPAIRING xi 6 McAllister st. ECKLEY GARAGE DIAL 833 if CLASS OF '44! i k Make Ike College Boot Shop ! Your Headquarters for Footwear in State College j _J For the Men— Taylor-Made Shoes For All Occasions THE COLLEGE BOOT SHOP Formerly S. P. S. Shoe Store UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Business Jump j Shown for State Business in 15 leading cities of Pennsylvania showed an average improvement of 7 per cent in Juno over the same month of last year, the Business Survey of the Col lege reported today. At the same time, the level'of general industrial activity about the state registered one of the sharpest monthly increases since last fall, advancing 8 per cent from May. This gain, which was contra-seasonal, brought the in dex to 82.7 of the 1923-25 average, the highest point since last Jart.l uary. The first six months of 19-10 produced substantial gains over the same period of 1939. Indus trial activity as a whole jumped 18 per cent in that time. June business in individual cities, based on bank debits, in dependent store sales and factory payrolls, were as follows compar ed to the previous June: Johns town, 27 per cent; Pittsburgh, 21 per cent; Erie, 18 per cent; Harris burg, 14 per cent; Allentown, II per cent; York, 11 per cent; Leb anon, 10 per cent; Altoona, 8 per cent; Wilkes-Barre, 8 per cent; Williamsport, 6 per cent; Reading, per cent; Lancaster, 5 per cent; Hazleton, 5 per cent. Philadel phia, because of a sharp drop of 17 per cent in bank debits, de clined 0.6 per cent, and Scranton, affected by a drop in payrolls, dined 1.4 per cent. Old Farmers Poorer Incomes of farmers 45 years of age or older are lower than those of younger farmers, according to a seven-year study of 1,262 Centre County farms conducted by J. E. McCord, professor of farm man agement and agricultural econom ics. Farmers over 55 had consist ently lower incomes. IST US CHICK voun CAR 135 S. 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