*y irvt vnce, an tei .887 P§ Daily 0 (EoUpgtatt II of ' P**" — VOL. 40—No. •56*^ College Honors New (adeltes AiWelcome Dance Jack Lord's Aristocrats ToPlay from 9-12 Penti State’s, newest service group, the Curtiss-Wright Cad ettesj will be welcomed to the, campus by nearly 100 male es corts tonight "at the Welcome Dance being held in the Nitt'any Lion Inn. The dance is being .sponsored by the Wartime Service Commit tee, an All-College committee {hat-will take charge of welcom ing all newcomers to <campus. Re presented on the committee are WSGA, Pan Hellenic council, IWA, IMA, Penn State Club, IFC 'arid PSCA. ■ Co-chairmen Daniel Gillespie and Claire ' Weaver announced last night that WSGA donated $l5 to. the committee to be used .in all future events of this .type. Jack Lord and his Aristocrats, will .play - p. m. to mid night. A short entertainment feat uring Jane Abrahamson and the “Honeyboys,” will take place dur ing intermission. Dance programs ’ w.ere distribut ed to the Cadettes at dinner last night.' , - r Tljere are a iimited number of tickets, on sale at the PSCA office in Old Main for couples who would like to attend .the 'dance. Admission is:ss cents a couple. i^^eryjpgvroji^he^^ John Burford and. Hattie 'Van ; Riper, , who will meet the girls at iJVatts Hall and introduce them to ' their-' escorts,fJßobert Dickey, Eu -gerie Yeager, Ruth Storer, Ruth Sprague, and Mai'garet 'Ramaly. Religious Groups Join#Observe : Brotherhood Week •. Nexft- week, has been designated -by .President Roosevelt as “Nation 'al .Brotherhood l Week.”. : ‘ ; '*.* ;All student religious founda tions of State College - are joining in > -the'.sponsorship .'of -a brother hood program to take place at the Westminster Foundation, West Beavel- avenue, next - Sunday at 6:20;.p.m. . The "program will feature com ments: by Miss lone Sykes of the Yale Divinity School; Miss- Sykes ' Was- formerly -associated with the ■ Westminster Foundation here. A .picture, titled’ “The World ;:We, Want' .to Live In” will, be shown; along with a playlet, “Par able of the Three Rings.” ;; : A special-dinner will'be hels ih : tlie vAjlenhfest Tearoom honoring Reyi Charles Owen Rice, who Will speak at Sunday’s ' chapel;. Rabbi Max Artz, visiting at Hillel Foun dation,-and Miss‘Sykes.’ ■ Serving -on the Brotherhood Committee, are Robert Dickey, cieo Mellot, Wallace Riley,- Joseph Boscov, and. Louis-Tillman. Rumor Corrected for , admission to the; Pennsylvania. State College fare ‘still being, received by the Office, William S. Hoffman, registrar, emphasized ip. pointing out an error in yes rtbrday'sf column, “Campuseer,” .by . Robert Kliinmel. It was re ported then* that someone had •bhen refused admission, but Hoffman- points out that the 'statement is untrue and the practice is against the policy of the. administration.' i. FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 19, 1943, STATE COLLEGE, PA, OWI Questions And Answers Discuss Future Education This is the last in a series of questions and, answers prepared by the Office of .War Information. Education after the war and the future of liberal arts studies .are discussed. What changes' in education may we expect as a result of this war? The war will undoubtedly em phasize the necessity of technical and vocational education. In the development of our pi'esent huge war machine, both within the military services and within civil ian services, men and women have specific jobs to perform.' It is equally important that .they .be trained to do specific jobs in the post-war situation., Only in this way can we expect to secure max imum ’ economic, production, re sults. Quick forms of communication and the events of the w,ar have made it clear at last to the' great majority of people that this is a very small world and that we must be interested in the implica tions for' our country of events and conditions in every corner of the world. Hence there is bound to be a great up-surge of interest Coed Deleters Vie At Shippensburg . Trave lin g to. Shippensburg State Teachers College this after teams; accompanied by Coa’ch Clayton H. Schug,. assistant pro fessor of public speaking,- compete tom'orrOw in the fifth an nual debate tournament. - , Question to be argued - is, solved that the. .United: Nations should establish a permanent fed eral union-with power to'tax-* and regulate international commerce, to maintain a-police force, to set tle international disputes and to enforce such settlements, and to provide for adriiission of other nations which, accept the princi ples of the union.” . The cross examination style in cluding 15-minute constructive speeches, 10-minute cross exam inations, and 5-minute summar ies, will be used, according the -coach. The two affirmative teams are .composed, of Margaret K.' Ramley, Ruth P. Sprague, Gertrude G. Rosen and Florence I. Jaffy. The two negative teams include C. Grace Goodlin and Rosalind B. Schnitzel*,' Ruth Clyde and M. Elizabeth Zimmerman. In the tourney which will con tinue all day tomorrow, - the Col lege teams will compete in a total of 12. debates, with each team en tered in four. Penn State teams placed second in last year’s Ship pensburg tournament and ■ took both first and second places in the tournament held in Lock Hav eh in December. Thespians Need Pianists For New Production Students. interested in playing the piano to assist Thespian pro duction should contact Cadmus Goss, production manager, at Schwab auditorium, 1 p.m. Satur day. The 46th annual Thespian pro duction is well on its way. Sing ing and dialogue tryouts were held Wednesday night, Goss announced. Final casting will be made in the very near future'. Successor To The Free Esti THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE in public print and in schools and colleges with respect to interna tional a flail's. • The curricula in history and the social sciences will certainly .be revised to take care ol this situation. ‘ There will'also be a need for re orientation .to the mew world of ideas and discoveries coming through science, and to the larger world of other peoples and other cultures with whom we must col laborate in establishing world or der. To this end there must be a renewed concern for clarifying hu man values and aspirations toward which we can direct our group activities ■ and our personal lives. t We&ised to be told that liberal arts were the basis of education. What is going to happen to liberal arts now? What is going to happen to small liberal arts colleges? The liberal arts college must re adjust itself to new developments in American life, but its basis is sound. The historic aim of liberal arts education was to give thet in dividual some understanding of ? the major ideas and conceptions which have guided the ■ thinking and action of our culture, as well as some awareness and sensibility.' to the values and insights. needed for human relationships, as they were expressed in the arts. The need for such education WilTbe greater than ever after the . war,and it is hoped that American educators will .have the courage and imagination .to, provide a pro gram of ljberaliirts education for. aivfng :Irr theVfibsMyarworld.; z Engineering Student Withdrawals Highest Despite Deferiirils Despite the fact that Engineer ing-students are among those granted deferrments to continue college, this school leads in the number of student- withdrawals for military service this semester and sixty-one of the former en gineers are now serving with the Army, Navy, Air .Corps or Ma rines. This can probably be 'Accounted for in that this school numbered the largest male enrollment on campus at the beginning of the semester, and all but 14 of those affected by the Army’s call are freshmen. Falling in second place, Lower Division has lost 36 to Army khaki, as well as one to the Curtiss-Wright program. Military action drew 33 from the School of Chemistry, third in order of with drawals. Agriculture losses total 25; Mineral Industries, 17; Tran sition School, 11; Physical Educa tion, 10; Education, 3: Liberal Arts, 3; and Graduate School, 2., Optical Phenomena Talk At Meteorology Seminar Central Pennsylvania Meteoro logical Seminar will -meet in 121 Mineral Industries from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Monday. . A special feature of the evening will be Albert Miller’s discussion on “Some Optical Phenomena of the Atmosphere,” an explanation of the rainbow, halo, aurbra, and sky aspect. Slides will be shown and an informal discussion will be conducted. Alan Bvunstein ’44 will speak on “Hurricanes” at the following meeting of the Seminar. Both Alan Brunstein and Albert Miller are official observers of the College weather station. ' Wished 1 Alumni Executives To A ttend Meetings; Discuss - Program Mr. George M. Arisman, presi dent of the Alumni Association, and Mr. Edward- K. Hibsham, executive secretary, will attend a series .of alumni meeetings, sched uled to take place in March. They will discuss the program of the alumni association and its rela tion to the College. The first meeting will be in Al toona, March 9. There will be a dinner at the Penn Alto Hotel, and Mr. Levi Gilbert, - city principal schools, will supervise. Mr. David R. McClay, supervis or of vocational agriculture jn Washington Courts, will take charge of the meeting scheduled for Washington, Pa., March 10! Mr. Arisman, and Mr. Hibsham, vjill spend March 11, at Youngs town, O. March 12, they will at tend a luncheon at the Yale,,Har vard, Princeton Club, in Pitts burgh, and finish their trip at a dinner that evening in Johnstown. Mr. Lametine Hood will be in charge of the Johnstown meeet ing. Father Rice to Speak Father" tiharles 1 Owens director of St. Joseph House of Hospitality in Pittsburgh, will speak on “The Dynamite of True Christianity” at chapel Sunday. Scheduled to speak for this Sunday was Dr. Luther A. Wejgle deahyaf Yale University Divinity Suffering from the greatest de creases according' to class, 81 freshmen have left and 69 sopho mores. The Army Meteorology course accounts for eight of these with drawals, and the Curtiss-Wright program five, while the 50 addi tional students who left school for diversified reasons raises the total number of semester with drawals to 253. Cabinet Meeting Jack R. Grey, All-College presi dent, announces that the Cabinet meeting has been changed from Monday to Tuesday, 305 Old Main, 7:00 p.m. Late News .TUNISIA—The . Allied high command announced last night that surprise moves of the veter an German tank troops under General Marshal Romell had ad vanced sixty-five miles into Tuni sia, captured three towns, three airdromes, and inflicted heavy casualties on the Allied troops. The action, which took place in the Medinine-Marat fortifications area, has placed the tion in Tamasa in great danger. Meanwhile, British Eighth Army troops have taken a position to the rear of > the Germans in an effort to offset the advances. MOSCOW—The Moscow mid night communique reported last night that the same Russian troops that recently captured Kharkov had advanced to a location on the Dneeiper River in southern Rus sia 35 miles from Morell. The ad vance may force the Germans to give up the entire Ukraine, PRICE: THREE CENTS Blue Key Donates Soph Hop Ticket To Victory Rattle Blue Band To Be Featured at Game Another prize, a ticket'to Soph Hop contributed by Blue Key hat society, raises the total to four awards for the second Victory Raffle to be held during intermis sion of the Pitt-Pehn State bas ketball game. The game basketball, two $5 credit slips, and a Soph Hop ticket will comprise the awards to be given to the winning ticket hold ers at tomorrow night’s game. Appearance of the Blue Band is another added attraction of the raffle, originally sponsored by All- College Cabinet. Hummel Fish burn, band director, will lead the fans in singing the National An them before the athletic events begin. Music will be played inter mittently throughout the evening, beginning at 7:30 p.m. Skull and Bones, Blue Key,' Druids, Friars, and Pafmi Nous hat society members will sell War Stamps for the affair. Albert Swan and John Watkins-will sell stamps at the Corner Room tonight from 8 to 11 o’clock, while Laibe Kess ler and Philip' Mitchell will take over. the duties from'2 to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow afternoon. Purchase of a 25-cent War .Stamp . entitjes , the. buyer to one for thie'nwards' jreiljiVen, to pur chasers'" ,ofi. 50 cents Worth "of stamps.-Stamps will also be sold at the balcony floor en trances of Rec dll before game time.- '-'4v ' i- The $5 credit slips were donated by Paul Mittentand the. Charles Shop. Swan will draw the lucky numbers for the prizes. Two more raffles will be held during the remaining two home basketball games. Froth on Sale Tuesday Froth will go on sale next Tues day, G. B. M. “Mousey” Stein, the publication’s .manager, announced last night. This Soph Hop issue, complete with four ex tra pages, is to be one of the finest of the current.semester, they say. Anyone having jokes for publi cation (they need not be of the drawing room variety) should shove them under the door of the Froth dungeon in- Carnegie Hall any time this week. Flashes... WASHINGTON The House Ways and Means Committee is scheduled to meet today to con sider President Roosevelt’s recent proposal to further limit all in comes. LONDON—RAF bombers direct ed a light bombing attack on war plants operating in France and Belgium. MacARTHUR’S HEADQUAR TERS—It was announced last night that Major-General Walker Kruger, American army strategist and tactician, had been elevated to command in Australia, in a move preliminary to the expected offensive against Japan. BERLlN—Propaganda Minister Goebbels announced last night in a radio speech to the German peo ple that they must not become over-confident by the recent Ger man advances in Africa, and that in Russia, Germany faced its most formidable foe, J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers