PA.GE, 'rwo Welcome Welcome summer schoJl Stl.l delltS! Thi.; i 3 the first real summer session since 1941 and we think that you'll like it. 'For you regular I.l.lnler.grachrate s who are continuing throughout the summer, these few weeks will give • you (.1 thanre to bring up those averages. Don't get the idea that this summer will be all work though. A wide variety of social and extra curricular activities has been planned for the summer school students. Dances, hikes, sport tournament's, lectures, demonstrations, conforen ceu, excursions, fun nights, and picnics are all parts of the program arranged by the Summer Se:Tsions,,of rice. , - 7 ti; These activities have been carefully planned. They are built around the expressed preferences at' students for certain types of entertainment and rdhaut the recreational activities in which stud ent.-3 have taken an active part in past years. In arranging the program, the administration did not forget that stammer school must offer a vadation as well as an education. For you new veterans and graduate students who. haven't been back to The campus in years, we invite you to see the change s that have been niade. Have you seen Windcrest, our trailer city, jtiiteast of .Altherton Hall or the new Naval Ord nance lab just behind , the Beta house? These are two of the newest additions to campus. This fall, Penn State Will have the largest en rothrient in its history: The freshman .class will be or_nittered out in a dozen colleges throughout the st3te., Only upperalass veterans will be admitted to phe:College preper. Thoseireshmen who spend their firSt.year at one of the srpaller schools will be guartardbeed adMittance to, the campus in their • Sephomere year. • A construction. program. hes been planned that will give the campus several new buildings inclu ding two new women's dorms and an addition to Recreation Hall. The Classes of 1946 and•All-Coll cgeMbinet have set -aside , a fund- to complete the Henry• Varnum Poor 'Muni in• the lobby. of Old Main and ,planshave been ,drawn up for a•Student Union building. • The student. body - is a more sober group with the intflux-ot a large number of veterans. Profes sors, claim, fitatt this, older group:; 'Of men take elames more seriously, than their:. civilian fellow i3tizlents. All in all, this is a new Penn State and we be lieve a better Pen n State. BIF THE SUtIMER COtLEGIAN Published every. Tuesday morning during the Eignmer,Sessions 'by students of the Pennsylvania. State College in the interests "of the College, stu dents, faculty,_ alumni, and friends. The Summer Collegian has the official sanction of the Summer Sessions office end Collegian; In:c., and its finances are controlled through the Athletic Aosociation director. contritutions, editorial or advertising, should be :left at the Collegian office, Carnegie Mil, daily between 1 and 3 p.m. Phone 711-380, or . extension 3811. Editor Doris Stowe • STAFF THIS ISSUE Managing Editor Associate Editor [Jews Editor Spgrbs Editor Saturday, June 29, 1946 TREK AT -KEELER.S voin t urain Business Manager Phyliss Deal Woodene Bell .... Ben I. FrenCh Lciuis Bell Lynette Lundquist Summer Session TEXTBOOKS New and Used Loose-Leaf - Zipper Binders 4,, All School Supplies Campuseer Monday the College officially will throw the ac celerated program to the winds, and take up the more leisuro:y two-semester-a -year program. No longer will the College be running a lull summer semester and a Summer Session at the same time, and the Summer Session program, if it can. be judged by the preView already released, will re gain its full pre-war splendor7Undergraduates of the College will 'appreciate the schedule especi ally in regard to vacations, since Independence Day,' Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter, etc., are once more holidays to look forward to. And spea king of holidays, the Fourth of July isn't too far away. • Man in the House Former Penn State coeds would probably pick up their pettidoats and run i•f they could see the goings on in Grange .these days. Grange, built in 1928, will house men this summer for the first time in its ferntile career. Married veterans VIII. their wives have been sighed up dor the. dorm, which also mark s the first time the College has attempted to house married couples in ciampUs dorMs. June Romances • `• When Maniac left the cantpus last week, 'she miased up on a few of the romances that had just come into full bloom, so Campy has taken over. George Kantor, Phi Bp, placed hi s pin on the bo som of AEPhi Bunny Roienthal, clintaxing• Whirlwind romance . . . Chi Phi Earl Jenkins had a big day Thursday, in the morning he Marked home-town girl Jane Smith, and in the afternoon he graduated . . . Triangle lierbie Mendt topped oft a long-time roniance witll Bettie Cauffiel preientirig• her. with a sparkler before going % back home to Venezuela . . . former Collegian sports editor ,flack Reid will be Married next Saturday in Philly to Rae Schaeffer, his childhood. gal. Phi KlaPPa Sig George Sample and Jen Neff. said their "1 do's" right here in. State College yes terday afternoon and left for Comry, where George will, be working-for the "Corry Evening Journal," Phi Sigma Kclgpa. Tom Davis and Chi Omega Jeanne Rile will soon be hearing wedding bells . . . recently-pinned Jack Weber, Phi Sigma :Kappa; • add. Trudy Vaddi s are , thin6:ng- of the "bonds of hiily matrimony" these days. Portfolio Moves in . Strange noises have been drifting eaross the hall from, the Portfolio office to the Collegian of fice of late. It seems that Portfolio's .Promotion manager doesn't like the way his fraternity house is being run, so he just Shoved up to the Portfo lio i - yff : Jce. But Campy still thinks that a bed in a in:is-managed fraternity house would, be softer than the tile floor in the Portfolio office. It's Never Too Late . Bill Campbeil can prove that it is never too late to turn in. a term paper. Some three years ago, Bill railed to write a term paper for a one-credit econ course before he clashed off to the service. So last Week Bill, wrtote the term paper, gave it to the prof, and passed the course! The-Good Old Days Visitors at the Library , these days are getting a lot of laughs, as well as a great deal of historical data, from the exhibit on Penn State in the "good old days." To really do the exhibit justice, it would require a whole day or so to look over the exhibit. And incidentally, credit for 'the fine work in the display goes to the Penn State Room staff. • and CATHAUM THEATRE- BUILDING . . THE SUMMER COLLEGIAN Everett Won't Do Anything He Doesn't Wanf TO Do Harold A. Everett, head of the department of mechanical en gineering at the College, has de cided on o ne thing that he doesn't plan to do' now that he has re tired. He doesn't plan to do any thing that he doesn't want to do. Everett has .served as head, of the department of meohanical engineering since 1931 and has been on the faculty at, the Col lege since 1922. During , - his 15 : years as head of the department, he has seen the enrollment of mechanical engi neering students rise from 260 in 1931 to a peak of 628 in 1942. Then, during World War 11, he saw the number drop to as low as 90. . This Spring, with veterans re,- turning once more, 228 men and 3 women were enrolled in me chanical engineering and 97 men End 2 women in aeronautical en gineering, which . until last year, was a part of the department that Everett heads. Among the mechanical engi neering; students he has seen come and go, he has noticed an !increasing• number of women. • i yiromen• Do All - Right "They've been Aping all right academically and those who have graduated have -done well in in •dustry, too," Everett says. !Although there are pleasing Positions for women in the me chanical engineering field, Ever ett feels their acceptance is lim ited and most of thein will find jobs' on "inside work." Everett has seen. other ,trends !'come and go, too, in his years as head of he,deparment of mechan ical. engineering. 'flour Milling Courses A There was a time, he recalls, 'when engineering sudents could major in mechanical engineering or: in flour- milling.. .; "Industry_ wanted graduates :prepared in those , fields," Ei.rer ett says, "but when the demand for men trained along those lines subsided, the. c o ses•'w e r e dropped." And . while those courses' were• dropped . ; aeronautical engineetiz ing became more and more in 'demand and, in 1946, aerodynam- ic s and, other- aeronautical couri es. in the mechanical engineering department came under, the new department, • aeronautical engi nering. While Everett has spent. years of his life teaching, he has spent some time. too, in the ship building industry. After serving two years in that - industry, he taught naval architecture at Massachusetts Institute of Tect ,nology for la years. Then follow- 17r ' ;c AV • ,14,V "?' 1,e4. ....,.., - .. , 4 (4 ~ , 0 ,, „....b A. ut, N '• "5. , -.1.< .11 G . A' N. • / -- 4- r. a , ....4 - i. , ~ ° b 61 - . Riclaa _ •dtr, ,rviri, . • ''''.'''..)- ', ' '''',• L.4, T. ,Ar.:LT.',/.4:.47.4 The spicy scent of clove, YANK? CLOVER the pet summertime . : ; ; in spankln; that • effectively translate breezy, light-hearted gal, • .zzla r r,,aa, YANKY CLOVER in Perfu me, 1.00 . Talcum, .SO Toilet Water, $l.OO • • Dysting Powder.; $1.00• MENLAMIHMAS f S. Allen St., SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 194 AROLD A. ed more years of .4eaching,.this time marine: engineering at •the. U. S. Naval Academy. From 'Ships to State -' In, 1918, he returned to the shipbuilding industry, but when the pastiNivar slump hit that in dustry and. in 1922 shipbhildds were scrapping instead. of con struoting ships, Everett , deserted' that work and joined the Penn State faculty. r L. Thermodynamics has , , been , his favorite subject. . Woodwork, fishing, golf; and a- rose. 'garden have been his favorite, hdbbies.,, . He also has maintained a' gfeat interest fn. yachting. While-teach ifig, at M.1.T., he served for three years as official yacht measurer for ;New' triglatul clubs. Since ,, the , ,speed•of a, ya:cht is inftuenceldi•bY its he. , ,deVised methods tiff? meateirning. the Ships, so that _dom.:- petition in the , yacht so. While Everett plans. to main 7 tain- •residertee - in- State -ColZr ' legs and continue in spverel.. , 9o ll - suiting engineering --positions, . ,hopes, to, :engineering " at his 'summer home- o.'Gfeiit ; i:'• 'clier• Island in •the--Thbitsimd.=:ls lands. Everett_, and his ,Ahe former Allee.ileSilkria; have;:',4*. children. Elizabeth - is rnairied.,;,,-t5.?,.: Johnston:and_liyekol; Cumlberstone, Md.; Vrhila . the wife of R. A. - lives in. Verona, N:...T., CLASSIFIED -SECTIOM LOST: Pair of glasses with •tor"• 4 toile shell rims, someWheifeL,2 around • White Hall. Belorigh "Smoky!' Glavin. call 2:0_31,V42.1., ¶TC' Prices Plus Tax e f j . , r7l„fre , ,-,,, ."Ntee' ,l ;. • . •:„.' 1 .',.... , ,.v; • '. ‘ - ‘'‘L'_: ,,, ?:* . ' • ...', -%.,...',...:.:N; . . 3.V,, el.' ..,. - , '‘7, , 4:, , elk, • L' . , !..xt, v t, e:- : • A - ' ,. '!l;t: * . i • -, ...I.„'N ,4: !' - 4 • ' :- . ::: 41. - ' '' ..r q :'' q . •*' .. - . .!..':" C ',.:4, r;. r' ' : ' '.?,'.s ~,,,.- 44 . - • :f4 , , , . it,"..,.14 .*:'‘ • - q4' St** Congo',
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers