r PAGE TWO SUMMER COLLEGIAN Published every Friday morning during the Summer Session by students of the Pennsylva nia State College in the interests of the College, students, faculty, alumni, and friends. The Summer Collegian has the official sanction and support of the Summer Session Office and its finances are controlled directly by the Student Union Office. INZMIIZEIENTaII FOR NATIONAL ADVMIMI3ING IIY National Advertising Service, ka. College Publishers Representative - 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. 14. V. CHICAGO • ROSTON • LOS ROI:MUM • SAN FRANCISCO Editorial and Business Office Student Union Desk, 101 Old Main., Dial 711 tvietaber qssociated ColteEoe R,ess. GAleEiiate Digest JOHN BAER Business Managers JAMES MeCAUGHEY PAUL GOLDBERG Women's Editor JANET' TWICHELL. Friday, August 1, 1941 Emergency Education Topics' discussed at the Superintendents' and Principals' Conference the last three days furnish an index to what are major problems of the day in education. • Glance at a few of them. For example: "Public Education .in the Present Emergency," "Educa tion for Defense," "New Developments in the National Defense Training Program," "Organiz ing the Schools and Community for National De fense," "Implications for Physical Education in the Present Emergency," and "Teachers and Their Organization in the Present Emergancy." Yes, education, in common with everything else, faces an emergency. We hope that teach- the characterizations were excellent ers in our schools realize the importance of their Heath repeated his hit in the first play by a per job and do it well. „-- - '"*lfect.,portrayal of the degenerate Bront brother in Moor Born. and the remaining • cast, from the director to prop . man, upheld its end . . . -the British War Relief Society sends an SOS to :all. cigarette smokers to save all tin foil- and turn it in at the downtown office. . Good Work! Keep 11 UP There is good news for Penn State in what Pierre Henrotte, who has been on the campus for the past three weeks, has to say about the Band, Orchestra and Chorus School. He calls it the only school of its kind in the East and of these words the College should. be proud. Mr. Henrotte knows what he is talking about, too. For 15 years he was conductor of the Metro ; politan Opera House Orchestra. He spends much of his time acting as guest conductor at music schools for young 136'yi and girls. It is not idle praise, when he says, as he did, that the Band, Orchestra and Chorus School should soon rival the National Music Camp at Interlochen, Mich., for recognition as the nation's foremost summer music school. • - The College should do more than just be proud of Mr. Henrotte's praise He foreseems a brilliant future for the school and it should be made cer tain that this future is realized. • • Market Report for Apron Strings Dr. Moses R. Lovell, last Sunday's vesper serv ice speaker, said that 95 per Cent of all school teachers are women. Some. of. them were in his audience and we suspect he made a host of friends when he predicted that women will be civiliza tion's leaders in future years. - We disagree with Dr. Lovell and think that women have just about found their -proper•laveL Ask any housewife how often she - can get her husband to wash the dishes while she relaxes in an easy chair and reads the evening paper. May we ask when, and in what' female Utopia, will women become generals and admirals? Or won't there be war? When. will they become explorers? Or • won't there be anything left to explore? When will they become engineers? Or won't there be any more industry? When• will they become bank president's? Or won't' there be any :inonek? When will they beconie newspapermen? (Sorry, newspaper workersj__Or won't theie be any news?, Finally—and this is the. vital question—who' would .take care of the babies? Or wouldn't there be any of those, either? . - . ,r~. 1 Distributor of tditors PAT NAGILBERG THE SUMMER COLLEGIAN ithiliEnimiiiminimumilintimmtinimuummiummumimmummilittimu THE CAMPUSEER 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1 1 1111111111111111111111111111111111 goodbye, Now This is the beginning of the end For, with these paragraphs your unpopular campus columnist bids farewell to the intelli gentsia -of summer session, those worldly-wise, modern, • adventurous persons ..who . - have lain awake till 10 p. m. every night wondering what Campy would have to say, who have eagerly de voured every word of this coluinn, digested it, and : . . • When you look. back on it, it has been a great summer We heard $o much about summers at Penn State that we rather thought a vacation (you didn't expect us to . kill ourselves putting out this rag) here may prove disappointing. But inter session and the last five weeks passed so fast that before we know it we'll have to stop cutting the lawns with our, irons on the golf course and getting down to the serious business of telling Bob Higgins what's wrong with our football team. And speaking of the gridiron; the venerable Hig will find himself with the tough job, of filling the biggest hole. in intercollegiate football and We don't mean our All-American Leon Gajecki. We're referring to gigantic Len Frketich, huge 300 pound tackle, who will be blocking off the . mortgage for his newly acquired bride and kid dies-to,be.instead of sitting on the opposingiline men . . . Mary Browne, one of the more attractive additions to the summer hall of feminine charm, is supplementing, her art work here with extra curricular study with fellow artist, Bob Hun zinger. Dratnafic Plaudits Of the many groups who have put in their spare time toward making our leisure time more pleasant, none is more deserving of plaudits than the dramatic group . . Night of January *l6 held us spell-bound throughout and while Moor Born Wouldn't be our choice for a summer play, Judy Moatz 'is going. on they record as being definitely through with blind - dates after her sad experience last . week-end .. . she'' - accpyted, one - with a Cornell lad, who got a terrific b l aildinp.. , from a fraternity brother here at State, and spend the most miserable evening of her life . . the payoff came when the Ithacan, one of those I-don't-drink-or-smoke-boys; refused some mild liquid refreshments because he was in training for ski-jumping and rowing . .at this rate he should be in -shape to break the world's record for jumping. linter On The Wagon The hottest drum-man in town is Hank (what size bowl did the, barber use on your head) Jeter with the hottest thirst this side of Bellefonte . . . too bad, Hank, some day you, too, will reach the ripe stage of adulthood . . . after waiting two whole years, DU's Prank "Muscles" Perna achieves his ambition of getting his name in this corner . . our candidate for Hot Dog King for 1943 is all smiles since 'Dot Ellis accepted his jeivelry . lovely Mary Jane Gibson is being squired these will stiniiner, evenings by - Bob Schuler who will get his coveted sheepskin on AugUst 10 . . : ditto Frank Bindford, whose friends will Cele brate the long awaited day with: the Sigma Nu playboy . Sally Hershberger •is -keeping the Sottund affair on fire. by last week's overnight hop to his Elizabeth abpde . . could it be, Sally? We'll. be with•you when the summer is gone. Whys The hundreds of people who- daily study the Land Grant mural in Old Main prove that •it is just as well-liked by people with only a laymari's interest in fine art as it is by art authorities. Which all leads us to wonder why the huge chandelier, which Winders a better view of the fresco, hisn't been_taken down. *embers of the fine arts.faculty asked 14 month& ago That it be .removed. _ This io. a small , thing but, -.aB` iss!ial r the sthall-thiags;-iisat 'waves transnosed .into = sound and - released through :S .a loudspeaker - panel: Pictufe.l' of eleCtrical emanations. from the heart Maybe recordecLlii cathode ray tubes which enable the to See.the "old, =pump'" Students whose brains may be at work as the *Taves , are picked foggy after cramming for examin- up. ations can test their mental facul- Anoink-w : r it in g osculograph, ties on the College's electroenceph- which can indicate a 400 trillion. . alograph. gain of any impulse, also graphs The machine is a recent addi- the waves on paper tape. tion to the eqiiipment in the psy- Dr. Lepley Says that the. ma chology experimental laboratories. chine has been-useful to the medi- In more simple terniinology it is cal profession—in the diagnosis of known as a "brain wave" machine - epilepsy and the lbcation .of brain. and is designed to study electric tumors. - • -; • • potentials from brain. tissue: Machine Records ":" \‘-:>4";;;--t 'Brain Waves' According to Dr. William IVI. " Lepley, assistant professor of psy chology, the machine Will enable - "Chick" Werner, Lion tra c f a student to hear a record of his track coach, was recently awar brain. The instrument does not ac- ed a gold football headgear, attia tually magnify the sound of the alma mater, the University of millions of gray cells grinding linois, for being the most "right away, but records electrical brain 'guy at the summer session there THE FIRST NATIONAL SANK OF _ STATE COLLEGE Member . of - Federal' Deposit Insurance Corporation , Leslie FRIDAY, AUGU,T-1; 1941