PAGE TWO Warnock Looks Back On Penn Mate Spirit During Past 24 Years What is that thing that brings uld grads back to - State and makes our men on a three day furlough spend two of them at their Alma Mater? Arthur R. Warnock, dean of wen, who tomorrow will 'have been serving the College for 24 years, wonders too but agrees that it is an unexplainable something about State that makes students and faculty members want to stay. In '1919 when 'Warnock, his wife, two infant sons, a 'Collie dog, baby carriage, and steamer trunk arrived in town from the University . of Illinois they planned to stay no longer than five years. They came from Pittsburgh by the rugged way of the old Lehigh Ex opress. 'They were greeted by a campus that was a "vgugh look ing place" after the SATC pro gram, created during the last war, had diSbande President Sparks was out of town so the Warnock family liv ed at his home for a few weeks. They had their meals with the football squad which had come back to life after Bob Higgins' return from war. When the Dean of Men left Ill inois to become the first Dean of Men at the College there was an understanding with the former in stitution that he would return in five years. He stayed here "be cause it is a pleasant place to live and bring up a family but primarily because the College 'Was in a growing stage that offered a thallenge....it was fun to be a part of it," Warnock explained. "Women were few and far be tween and had a very small part in activities." Margaret A. Knight was 'Dean of Women. Dean Stod dart, present Dean of the Liberal Arts School was head of the de partment of Agriculture-Chemis try. Frank D. Kern, now graduate dean was head of the department of Botany. The head of the borti titlture, Dean Fletcher, is now Dean of the Ag. school. Many fac ulty memers and administrative staff members were watching the town and College grow in 1919. Dean 'Warnock has seen WRA and WSGA come into being and Wolever Named Supervisory Head Clarence R. Wolever, was re cently appointed. supervisor of su pervisory training in the College's extension services according to a report from the President's office. The new supervisor, an assist ant professor of education in ex tension, succeeds Dr. Vernon G. Schaefer, who resigned to accept a position as personnel director for Radio Corporation of Ameri-. ca at Lancaster. Mr. Wolever, is a graduate of State Teachers College, Blooms urg, Nvlhere he received a Bach elor of Science degree in Edu cation in 1931. He brings to his work a vast experience ;both in teaching and industry, a sound understanding of the problems of his 'division, and many constructive ideas. While teaching public sohool from 1931 •to 1933, he took grad uate work at -Columbia Univer sity and numerous courses in in dustrial engineering under the Penn State extension services. In 1937 'he became supervising prin cipal of the Falls-Overfield Voca tional school district. Jn 1937 Wolever became indus trial and public utility contact supervisor for the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Com pany and in 1939 was made mer chandising supervisor for West inghouse Electric Supply Com (pany. 'He resigned this position in (1941 to work for the Line Ma iterial Company, Milwaukee, Wis 'consin. 'He became affiliated with the , College as an instructor on 'the 'ESMWT supervisory training staff in 1942. with them has watched coeds as sume a definite part of the Col lege social and government ac tivitis. The fraternities, even though there were only 25, occu• pied a more influential place than they did in the last few years. Twenty-fora• years ago there was a . very strong student gov ernment policy created through keen political competition. Rep resentation on the School Coun cil was based' on class orgailiza• tions. When class meetings were called 90 per cent of the members turned out. The Senior Class pres ident was the "big shot" whose word was law to students. • The strength of the Senior class president was shown, when War nock described a Pep Rally at Co-Op Corner. It resembled a riot more than a rally. Things were coming to a head when fire wood was dragged to the center of the group. At that point the Senior Class president and one of the football stars stepped to the cen ter of the mob and said, "Boys, the show is over." The wood was taken away and the rally *.as ov er. This one instance did more to arouse the Dean's ,respect for Student government than any other. Politics assumed the form of the active rather than the subtle as it is today. Sophomores in an eff ort to keep Frosh from organiz ing had a tomato throwing con test in the Chapel which was in the Sandwich Shop wing of Old Main. Warnock saw the lights go out in Old Main and was hit on "his best green hat" with a to mato. He suggested quelling the disturbance to Acting President Pond. On the latter's advice he just stood and watched "because" as Mr. Pond explained, "it was a Penn State. tradition." The fol lowing morning the new Dean of Men."waded through Old Main through •rotten tomatoes, eggs, and watdr." These instances broke Warnock into an entirely new type of col lege. A few years later, he ex rlainS, the challenge this College offered began to work. "All things considered the op portunity to be at Penn State during the last quarter of a cen tury is one 'I 'couldn't haVe had in any other institution in the Un ited States," Dean Warnock stated. Dickinson College Prexy, lecture' And. Author Addresses Chapel Sunday Dr. Fred P. Corson, author, lec turer, and president of Dickinson College, will speak at Chapel Serv ices this Sunday. .Dr. Corson, who was ordained to the Methodist Episcopal minis try in 1920, served successfully as pastor at Jackson Heights, N. Y.; New Haven, Conn.; Port Washing ton, N. Y.; and Simpson Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., before being chosen president of_ Dickinson College in 1932. A profound writer, he has writ ten two books of exceptional merit. They are "Dickinson College---An Interpretation of Function and Purpose" and "The Dilemma Of the Liberated•" Dr. Corson has received the fol lowing degrees: A. 8., Dickinson College, )1917; AJM., Dickinson Col lege, 1920; BiD., Drew University, 1920; D.D., Dickinson College, 1931; Syracuse, 1933; Litt.D., Uni versity of Maryland, 1936; L.L.D., Western' Maryland. College, 1936; Allegheny College, 1937; Franklin and Marshall College, 1936; Get tysburg College, 1937; and Univer sity of Pennsylvania, 1937. As a lecturer, the former Meth odist Episcopal pastor has gained a wide following. Annually he is 'called upon to address religious groups. The College-choir will sing Ave Maria lby Areadelt. THE COLLEGIAN Forestry Faculty Members Serve In War Activities 'Wartime activities of four mem bers of the forestry department staff at the College were reported today by V. A. Beede, department head. W. C. Bramble, who was asso ciate professor of forestry when he took military leave of absence, has been promoted to a captaincy. Captain Bramble is in the Medi terranean area with the intelli gence branch of the Army Air Forces. M. K. Goddard, assistant profes sor of forestry, also was recently made a captain. He is a battalion adjUtant at Camp Croft, S. C., and has been selected for special trains ing at the Adjutant General's School at Fort Washington, Md. D. D. Stevenson, on leave from his duties as professor of forestry research, until recently served as director of a public service camp in New Hampshire. He has ac cepted a temporary assignment in the Office of Economic Warfare and will go to Guatemala in con necticn with the wartime produc tion of auinine. 'M. W. Humphreys, assistant pro fessor of forestry, has accepted a temporary assignment on a special timb3r production war project which is being launched by the War Production Board and cooper ating agencies. The project will be administered by the U.. S. Forest Service to stimulate the produc tion of lumber, veneer, logs, pulp wood, and other nroducts urgently needed for war. Prof. Humphrey will be located in Virginia and will take up his duties about Sep tember 1. Prize Art Prints Are Exhibited A collection of sixty prints by Norman Kent, James D. Havens, and John C. Menihan is now in the Library, according to Robert T. Grazier, chairman of the ex hibit committee. The group is comprised of . wood cuts, block prints, linoleum en gravings, wood engravings, and lithographs. They cover a wide range of subjects including land scapes, figures, and portraits. Kent, Havens, and Menihan have all been active in the Print Club of Rochester since its found ing and each has received the University of Rochester Fairchild Award for notable work in crea tive art. Norman Kent received his early training in Rochester, later work-. ing independently in Italy. He has won numerous awards in national and international exhibitions and is represented in some of the prin cipal galleries in this country, in cluding Carnegie Institute, the Li brary of Congress, New York Pub lic Library, Cleveland Museum of Art, and Baltimore Museum of Art. Some of Kent's prints shown in this exhibit include "The Aban doned Winery," "The Blacksmith Shop," "Early Harvest, and "Smith Alley." "Glen Iris" and "Ponte Nomentano" are among the wood cut grout). Mr. Kent's work is rec ognized by the vigorous, broad quality with dramatically con trasted spacing of black and white and expertly suggested detail. James D. Havens won an inter national reputation for his work in black and white and for his color woodcuts. His bookplates have been shown in the International Exhibition. Critics say that he has a fine sense of color, a feeling for composition, and an exceptional grasp of the technique of wood block cutting and engraving. "Nuthatch," "Red Cutter," "Car olina Corn," "Wind and Snow," and "Spring Mists" are examples of Havens' work included• in the exhibition. John C. Menihan is Tepresented Murphy Suggests Five Post-War Programs . Five possible peace plans now open to the U. S. were outlined today by Marion F. Murphy, geo graphy specialist. According to Mrs. Murphy the following plans of world reorgan izaticn may be possible. 1. A world federation of na ti ;is. This popular plan would fail, she believes, because people are still not ready to make com mitments and the sacrifices neces sary for its operation. 2. A federation of the United Nations (the United States, Bri tain, Russia, and China) would pr,bably also be inadequate, she feels, because even now we can't all see eye to eye on common pro- Jane Abramson Safes Day. For Thespian Show Witn the return of veteran Jane Abramson to the Thespian fold "Once Over . Lightly" is beginn ing to hit the production line. First of the production's skits to reach completion is "This Ain't the Army," a burlesque on life in the barracks, which is credited to George Graham. Jane is now the author of three of the show songs, among them the title number, "Once OVer Lightly" which will be used as the lietmot if. When the show opens on Sep tember 24, "This Ain't the Ar my," will already have had a preliminary try-out in Pittsburgh, with the Y Triangle Players, 'un der the direction of Herbert Zu kauskas, class of '42. But there won't be any copyright suits be cause Zukauskas has the per mission ,and the blessings of Gra ham and Marty Skapik, directdr Several other ' skits are in the. process of production' and Skapik is .calling both men and women actors to try out for the cast at Schwab, 7:30 Monday night. Inci dentally, Skapik stated that his urgent pleas for girls for the pro duction numbers have at last been answered. by a group of lithographs, among which. Are "Grey Day," "Adiron dack Eirening," "Farm in the Hills," "Connie," and "Ellering ton's Place." A lithograph of a parachute landing reflects Meni han's present war work. Stationery - for Servicemen . . . official insignia -for all branches . . . Use V-Mail for qui& service, Slide. Rules - Nlw in stock . . . complete line of rules for every purpose . . . Sale restricted to eligible • persons. • • Notebooks-- Loose Leaf . . . Standard sizes . . . metal rings . . . .All standard Engineer ' ing form to fit. • Rental Library— Of the latest worthwhile books . . . Keep pace with the reading times thru our circu lating books. K E LE !'); • . Cathaum -Theatre Building FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1943 blems. Russia's plans for Germany after the war may be very differ ent from ours, o•r Russia and Ger , many may even make a separate peace, she said. 3. The game of power politics where Russia will balance Ger many and England will balance Europe. Although advocated by the late Professor Sypkman, of Yale and others, this plan might tend to develop once again nation alistic hatreds. 4. An alliance with Great Bri tain in which Britain would con trol the world's inner crescent consisting of England, Gibraltar; Malta, Suez, Aden, Ceylon, and Singapore; and where North and South America, South Africa, and Australia would form the outer crescent of power. 5. A series of regional re grbupings, as suggested by For tune magazine, that might lead eventually to a world federation. In this plan Europe would be con trolled for a time by a council composed of Russia, Great Bri tain, and the United States, which would operate till order was re stored and then withdraw. The end result would be a Europe in which nationalism are culturally distinct_ but 'no longer virulent, and boundaries are clear but no longer important. "If peace is to be permanent, the plans must be flexible • and must allow time for political, ec onomic, and social readjustment," Mrs. Murphy said.