' PAGE TWO On Labor Education One hundred United Steelworkers' leaders from Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York are currently attending a labor institute at the College. The purpose of this institute program is to offer a series of related subjects dealing with labor problems in order to develop competent lo cal union leadership. "Big oaks from little a corns grow" may be a trite expression, but rather appropriate here. Nothing on a large scale can be accomplished without a small beginning and per haps this is the beginning of the education of labor on a large scale. There is often present on a college campus the feeling that education is the cure-all for all ills and. the College is, scarcely an exception. But even, if edutation doe s not prove to.he the' antedote that is needed in the present labor-management sit elation, at least it is a step, and it is hoped a step in the right direction. To Golfers In regular semesters there is an athletic fee paid by . 01 students. Out of thi s fee a certain amount is taken to care for the golf course, which is a rather expensive preposition. When this is done, everyone pay s the same fee regardless of whether -ha•or she plays gplf. During the summer, there is no 'such fee collected from ail students and since t}i go;f course mupt, still he mowed etc., some one has •to pay for the. process. The persons to pay for this .service are those who play, and thus the ice Which the golfers are requested, to pay. THE SUMNER COI:IE,6IAN , pubbstted every Tuesday and .P4itlaY morning dur lniihe regular College year , by 'the sta ff ' of 'the Daily lan •the , Penn.sxlvanja sta.te , ..College Entered. as see e l alo.reatter Jttly at the State 'College. Pa. Post-Office under the 'act of lotarch'g. 1,149. • eVerY rll4eslisay .nwrnizig during" the Winer Sessions 1 1:2r students of the Pennsylvania StAte College in the. interests Of the College, stu dent.,s, fficulty . , anctfriewls. .13tie Summer Collegian has the official sanction of The Suminer Sessions office and Collegian, Inc., and its finances are,controlled through the Athletic' MO.C.Ciatice director. 411 contributions, editorial or advertising, Sholild be ;left ; at the Collegian office, Carnegie .Jail, daily. between 1 and 3 p.m. Phone Tll-380, or extension NI. Editor Doris Stowe Tuesci r 4y, July 9; 194 • .J-fr TDtf AT Business Manager Pliyliss Deal NOW OPEN For Delightful Dining You'll enjoy our deliciously prepared foods, done to make you forget the hot weather. DINE HERE OFTEN! E COFFEE SHOP 210 W. College Ave. Gifting or for your own personal writing ... stationery ls dgfini(cly the right gesture. Keelers have distinctive ------- stationery to fit every personality. Our selection of - Eaton's Randomweave, Varsity, Coronet and many others are designed' especially for those who know fine' stationery. NOTHING C r"LD BE 'ER Campuseer Feeling very dirty and more than a little tired, (any similarity between this and criticism of the Pennsy ralroad is purely coincidental) your own Campy has returned from Philadelphia where she sat in on the grand opening of the life of Mr. and Mrs. C.. Jackson Reid. The premiere appearance of the Reids was made in the Frankford Congre gational Church Saturday afternoon. ...Jack was known to the campus as a reed headed s ailor and sports editor of Collegian. His,bride, gre . Schaek fer, was a high school sweetheart. Bes7'vi shes to the , newlyweds, and here' s hoping the man in the situation soon finds a. job. To date Jack has an apartment but no job. • • Weatherman, Take Nose And to all the summer sessep people, we at the College have only one fling to say . • you must have pull with the weatherman. For the first time, well practically anyway, Penn State put in a rainless weekend. Didn't you notice - 110w curly everyone's hair was? An&that shoes were very much in evidence? In case clarification is needed here, Penn State coeds are wont to remove their shoes when dodging raindrops between classes. Anyway, more power to you and many more wa terless weekends . . . '• • iitat Here and There And here and there around the country we find vacationing' Penn Staters . . . Mr. and Mrs. Geor ge Sample (the former Janet Neff) are now settled in. the new home in Corry; Bev, Joyce is • among the many spending her time down at the' shore; Mary Lou Waygopd is 'way out West attending a Delta Gamma convention, and Jean l:)al on. is working in a hospital in New York, hardly vaca tioning, this last. Lou Stone is aboard a ship for Europe, as is former all-college preOent, yaughn Stapleton, and Mickey Blatz is yitch-hik.» ing to Oklahoma where he will visit the "one and only." Mei FalocAs, Rube and Pete, are now en 'route to North Carolina, also via the thumb route. - • Wrong Profession Then there's the story of the hapless lad who called• for his date at the entrance to one of the Ath Hall. sunbathing courts and' was hastily nab bed. by one of the hostesses who informed him that dates were alway s called for at the front .en trance as no men were allowed in the courts. A few minutes later, four plumbers, janitors or what not, began a series of unmolested trips in and out of the dorm via the sun court route. (ed. note: _our lad should join a union. Campy 3151 Students'Register For Summer tourses A total of 3151 students have registered for the Main Surnmie.r Session and the Twelve Weeks Course at the College, officials said today. Fifteen hundred of these stu dents were veterans, according to Mrs. Ttebecoa Doerner, of the Of f ce of Veterans Affairs, who re ported that an estimated. addi tional 200 veterans have not yet filled out the Veteran Regidtration Forms, which all vel,erens are required to complete. Golf Fees . will be $l5 for twelive weeks, SU) for six weeks, arrd $5 for three weeks, announced Den 'Sabath, today. KZELERS sruirarnß COLLEGLAN. Retiring Dean To Reside In The City Of Churches After spending 24 hours a day for nearly'24_years Dean of Women at the College, Charlotte E. Ray still feels that she hasn't done enough for Penn State. And while she has been influential in building, the enroll thent of women students from, slightly more flan 300 in 1925 to nearly 2300 in 1945, it's the things that Dean Ray feels she hasn't been able to do that are foremost in her mid. Dean Ray, a teacher in the Pittsburgh. high schools, first came to . Penn State during •the summer of ,1922 as assistant dean of women. The experience, she thought, was a part- of her training for a position as a high schooldean of girls. 'ln (February, 1923, she Obtained a leive from her Pittsburgh posi tion to serve as acting dean of women here. 'And seven months later she found herself, not a high school dean of girls, but Dean of Women at the Pennsyl vania State College. When the women's enrollment was in the hundreds, Dean Ray was 'well-acquainted with all of the co-eds. But as the enroll ment .rose• into the thousands, she foun4 it harder to know all. girls intimately. While she, admits it has been impossible for one person to know all of the more than 2000 women, students, she or, one of her assistants attempts to learn to .know each co-ed. Miss Ray thinks the most dif ficult thing about being a dean of women is that no one knows enough to fill such a position., and also that there's not time to do one-fourth of the things there are to' be done. She feels the most satisfying part is. working with the younger generation. Dean Ray's interest in women students doesn't end with their' graduation from Penn State.. For many years she has conducted surveys . of women graduates, learning, for example, that in 1942, all but 2 per cent of the women in, the graduating class .4ira lantaie • € Chocolate creations inconceivably deli cious to excite the most discriminatitig -- palates— the delight of gourmets. , Half Pound Boxes . 1 . .$1.26 Pound Boxes ... . $2.00 Chocolate . .$1.25 Chocolate Thin Mints . ALSO WONDERFUL CANDY BARS 4 4 4 f - (Pate de Noisettes Giandula et Fruits Massepain Creme de Cafe Deiiinitely the tastiest candy bars for 35c in town. THE CORNER RI IM TUESDAY; JULY 9, 1946 had obtained employment. _She also is interested ip . alunthae clubs throughout the - . state' 'and' frequently visits them. ' After she retires, Dean''.Ray will move to Wilkinaburgv Qften called the City of Churches. ,She , will lived near her old home, her .home church, and her'ilma spat- er, the University of pitgoargh. There, she received her....b444C10r, of science degree ity,,l9l9',axid:her master of ,arts degree in 1924. "I hope to become - civilized. and • stop being in a hutry,"l:s:Miss Ray's only answer to a question about her future plans,. " And she hopes aga in , ti?„ crelire into the study of 'Latin,cr, re ek and mathematics, nod . .att'er ihe has retired, but starting op - rthe day she retires. And then._ she plans to do some reading, op:AV:d arn affairs and participate in community service activities. "I've alway s regrette4, 9 LP.Saii Ray says, "that while Urging the girls, to study and educate thigm selves, I've found myself; ling farther and farther away., from study." • But if Dean Ray during, .her years at Penn State drifte,d„Xar ther and farther away. „from study, it was because iti• had become closer and closer to• her students. . , And today, after 23 YLlNati-, of service to the College, Deazi.Ray on the eve of. her retiremen't is receiving letters of appreciation and congratulation front• orgttni zations, friends, alumnae, 4nd students. Their feelings- - 1;m-re— (continued on page.:th,ree,k Ad amoiats -ha + --+
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers