• . • • i ltr B at t y T o ti rgian AN IA VOL. 39—No. 18 Junior Prom, Pitt Penn Games Top '4l Fall Calendar The Fall Semester calendar, re leased lasit night by Pauline E. Keller '43, Panhellenic Council president, and George E. Dono van, manager of Student Union, is still tentative because of problems that may arise due to the accel erated program of Penn State. Notable additions to the foot ball schedule include the Univer sity of Pennsylvania game and the Pitt game at home. Interest ing also is the fact that Senior Ball weekend coincides - with ' the Pittsburgh game, which will be played here November 20. The semester program will begin with two frosh mixers and end with Junior Prom on December 11. The Fall Semester schedule fol lows: September 12—Freshman Mixer 19—Freshman Mixer 25—Military Ball October 3L-Bucknell game (home) 10—Collegian Dance 17.WRA Dance '23-1F Ball 24—Alumni Weekend November. 7—Syracuse game (home) 14—Pennsylvania game (away) 20—Senior Ball 20—Pittsburgh gamic. (home) December 11—Junior Prom Grangp 'Lecturers Begin Annuattourse Here - Pennsylvania's Grande lecturers opened their tenth annual short course in farm program leader ship at the College yesterday. Among the speakeis at the open ing session was Dr.. John L. Gillin, prcifessor of sociology at the' Uni versity of Wisconsin. Dr. C. Hor ace Hamilton, head of the depart ment of rural sociology at North Carolina State College, is "schedul ed to speak today. More than 100 Grange lecturers have registered for . the , four-day course,, designed to offer-up-to-the minute tips on agricultural edu cation. Special emphasis of this year's program is the wartime emergency •in agriculture. _ Late News Flashes... BASEBALL SCORES American League Detroit 3. New York 1 ' Washington 7, Cleveland 1 Chibago 7, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 6, Boston 2 ' National League Brooklyn 5, St. Louis 2 (Other teams not scheduled) WASHINGTON Secretary of War Stimson announced that the aerial defeats suffered by the Jap anese in the battle off Midway Is land has evened the fighting forces greatly. Stimson added that Japanese landings off the Aleu tian Islands were probably on a small scale. Heavy fog banks have prevented American flyers from .getting more than fleeting glances of the Japanese. CAIRO, Egypt—German super ior4y in tanks, guns and Olen was responsible for the inability of the Imperial British Army to hold its position about Tobruck and has made it necessary for them to send several companies into Cairo. Famous Rothschild Quartet To Appear In Summer Sessions Concert July 9 Fritz Rothschild, famous leader mission will be charged. Similar of the Rothschild String Quartet, concerts by the . 13and, Orchestra will bring his group to Schwab and Chorus School of the Summer Auditorium July 6 as part of the Sessions are expected throughout recreation and entertainment pro- the six weeks main session period gram of the Summer Sessions, it from June 29 to August 7. was announced last night by the Besides Rothschild, who is first Summer Sessions Office. violinist, the quartet includes Rothschild, with his European Christine Phillipson, second violin quartet, concertized all over Eu- ist, who was associated with the rope for many years, then came Columbia and National Broadcast to the United States to introduce ing companies and appeared as his idea of ensemble records made soloist with the N. B. C. orchestra; with one part missing. Since then, Eugenie Limberg, violinist, who his American group has made played as soloist with the Chicago, .nearly 100 "Add-A-Part" records Cincinnati and New York sym and presented a number of con- phony orchestras; and Lillian Ren certs in this country. berg, cellist, who concertized ex- The Perm State concert will be tensively throughout the East and open to all students and no ad- Middle West. Conference Heads Call Agriculture Foundation Of Present Struggle Cowboys, Cowgirls, Cabins To Feature Soph. Hop Decorations More details concerning. decor ations for the July 10 semi-formal Soph Hop were announced last night by Walter C. Price, chair man of the dance committee. Carrying out _the Dirde Ranch theme the bandstand from which Charley Barnet and his orchestra will play will be disguised to re semble a log , cabin. The refresh ment stand will also be decorated as a cabin. Cowboy and cowgirl figures will decorate the walls while the cus tomary ceiling of decorations will be eliminated. The name tags over the fraternity booths will be printed on small rough boards. The program •committee has selected blue leather covers with the College seal imprinted in white, - "for' the dance programs. Campus Blackout Rules Released • Campus regulations for the all night blackout next Wednesday were released last night by George 'W. Ebert, chairman of the com mittee on protection. Signal for the -beginning of the 'blackout will be the lighting of the street lights downtown. This is for the preliminary phase of the test. All building lights not shielded must be turned out. Lights on campus will be exting uished. Pedestrian and vehicular traffic will continue as usual. No gather ings, meetings, or groups will be permitted in the open. All meet ings, lectures, rehearsals, and classes will be dismissed -for the blackout, when the yellow (alert) signal is given. --This will give the groups ample time to reach their homes before the blackout alarm. There will be evacuations during the black out at the discretion of the Air Raid Warden. If none are ar ranged, students must observe all rules, refrain from the use of lights in any form that may be visible, and cooperate with the wardens. One recommendation of the rules is that group singing be en couraged. Smoking will not be permitted on porches or outdoors. Libraries and branch reading rooms will close at 9 p. m. Flashlights must be used spar (Continued on Page Two) Successor To The Free Lance, Established 1887 OF THE PENNSYLV FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 19, STATE COLLEGE, PA "People must eat. For that reason,. agriculture is the basis of all 'struggles of mankind, includ ing„the present war."' J. Clyde Marquis, representing the United States Department of Agriculture, yesterday made this statement the theme of his address before'the county farm agents and statewide leaders in vocational ag riculture, assembled on campus for a two-day conference on." Wa rtime Problems of Pennsylvania Agriculture." Marquis maintained that Italy, Germany, and Japan all entered the present war in search for food and raw • materials that they could not'produce on theirr. thicklypopu lated homeland areas. "Agriculture must be prepared and organized to participate in peace conferences after. this war, and must begin planning now for the post-4war period," 'Marquie de clared. He deplored the fact that agriculture was not represented at the peace conference after World War I. Two dangers in the present situ ation were named by Dr. W. I. 'Myers, head of the department of agricultural economics at Cornell University. They are the wide spread public beliefs that food is abundant, and that parity prices for farm products will give farm (Continued on Page Three) Warneke Asks Students To Watch Stone Block Become Lion Shrine By ROBERT KINTER "Because this is the students' shrine, we invite them up to watch us and to ask any questiOns they wish," stated 'Heinz Warneke yesterday as he and Joseph Gar atti, stone cutter who will do the "roughing out" of the shrine, pre pared measuring devices lOr carv ing of the huge lion. He said the students would gain more and more interest as they watched the growth of the 13-ton piece of stone into the Lion Shrine modelled after the lion which was, moved yesterday from the second floor balcony in Old Main to the site of the carving between Recreation Hall and New Beaver Field. The shrine, gift of the class of 1940, will be placed near the, spot on which the carving is being done where anyone who wishes may watch the actual cutting of the stone. `This scene is one which stu dents in very few other colleges will have the chance to see," said STATE COLLEGE All-College Scrap Rubber Eve To Start Today SALVAGER—C. Dewey • Krum rine, head of the Centre County Salvage Committee, today voiced his approval of the All-College Rubber Salvage effort to add to the tons of used rubber collected by his committee and local service stations. LA Council To Add Twelve Members ' Eight juniors and four sopho inores . be, elected to' .Liberal Arts Council June 29, the Council decided at its first meeting of the Summer Semester last night. Liberal .Ants sophomores and juniors interested in becoming members of the LA Council must present a petition signed by 25 Liberal Arts School students from their class to Student Union. Clos ing date for presentation of the pe titions will be June 26, the Council decided. Liberal Arts Council will meet June 29 to select new members from the list of students handing in petitions. Representatives from each department will be among those selected, Council . members decided. Mr. Warnke •as he moved about th huge stone block and•the model from which the measuring ma chinery was being' made. Here and there, on high pointS of the model, they had driven nails which would serve as• measuring points. Around - the nails they were daubing plaster to hold them firm as Mr. Warneke continued, "Most • colleges of any size have stone cutters who do some work in sculpture classes and very rarely an artist comes in to do some small work, but students in hardly any other college in the country will have a chanca to see as large a work as this unfold before their eyes. "This is the reason why every student should watch the shrine grow. They will see a complete change in the lion each time they visit us and I feel sure their inter est will grow so that they will Want to keep coming back as often as they can until we are finished sometime early next Winter," he concluded. * * * PRICE: THREE CENTS Sludenfs' Campaign To Aid Borough Group Scrap rubber, which includes everything from run-down rubber heels to old worn-out tires and inner tubes in fraternity and rooming house basements, will be collected today under the auspices of All-College Cabinet to assist the State College Salvage Com mittee in its all-out effort to gar ner rubber for essential war indus tries. In accordance with a proclama tion made by President Roosevelt last week, the committee has been collecting rubber since June 15 and already has between three and five tons of the valuable scrap product. All-College Cabinet has appoint ed a committee of M. Williams Lundelius, Richard S. Kurtz, Pau line E. Keller, and Muriel S. Tay lor, all seniors, to urge the various campus living ' organizations to search their basements, attics, and backyards for used articles such as tires, inner tubes, hard rubber tires, garden hose, boots and over shoes, hot water bottles, rubber belting and rubber gloves, all types of -sheeting, pads and. mats tings, raincoats, rubber heels, bathing caps, and discarded jar rings. "If the College students coop:- erate with the Boy Scouts who will make a house-to-house can;- -vass today,' we can more than triPle'the present supply," said G. Dewey Krtimrine, head of the-sal vage drive in Centre County. Any rubber scrap turned over to the Boy Scouts as they pass out blackout instruction posters for next Wednesday will be sold at a penny-a-pound rate and the pro ceeds used for Army or Navy Re lief, the USO, or • the Bed Cross, explained the County head. The several tons of rubber col lected for the past week in serv ice stations at the same rate will be eventually sold to the govern . - ment at $25 a short ton, but all contributed rubber articles will (Continued on Page Two) Fredman To Head IFC Open House Committee Interfraternity Council's part in the next Old Main Open House, scheduled tentatively for July 28, will be directed by Samuel G. iFredman '43, according to M. Wil liams Lundelius '43, IFC presi dent. Other newly-appointed mem bers of IFC's Open House commit tee are Thomas L. Zumbro '43, Jack E. McCool '43, and John A. Jordan '43. Present plans call for Interfraternity Council to take charge of all games during the next event. Freshman Fees Due Al Bursar's Today All freshman Summer Semes ter fees at:e payable in the of fice of the Bursar in Old Main from 8 a. m. till noon, and from 1 to 5 p. m. today. Three windows are provided in alphabetically arranged ord er to facilitate payment, it was announced by Bursar Russell E. Clark. Freshmen failing to make payMent during the specified hours will be subject to a five dollar fine.