Co-tee Swim Party VOL. 20—No. 5 Dr. Ben Euwema Named LA Dean Senator Pepper to Speak At Educators' Conference) The Honorable Claude Pepper, United States Senator from Florida, will be the main speaker at the annual three day_Superintendents and. Principals Conference which will take.place on campus today, tomorrow, and Thursday, July 30, 31, and AugUSt 1. Senator Pepper will appear in Sdhwab Auditoridm at 8:15 tonight, when the conference holds its secondsession. He . will be presented to the and . The conference, sponsored of Education, and under the direction of Dean Marion R. Trabue,: has "Good Schools on Parade" as its .theme for this year's meeting. It will hold six sessions • and an annual dinner throughout.its institute, featuring prominent educators from all pants;; of the state. Registration for the conference will take place in the first floor lounge of .•old• Main morn ing: "dead Practices: in. Meeting, the ,Needs of the Returning Veteran" will be the first topic of discus sion, ' when • the ' conference con -VeneS' in room 121 Sparks at 2 p. . „ • •• m.. today. - Presiding at this session. Stiperinten-. dettr;rPOttbS7CO - Unly:' - fSchooLs; Coudersport. . . Under the chairmanship of Thomas H. Ford,' Superintendent of• . Schools, Reading, . the third session ,gid.ts! under way' at 9:30 tonforrow morning .in • room 1211 Sparks, - with "Good PraCtices in an. , Plifective • Guidance Program" .as .its source for debate.. ..In 'its fourth session, to be held in the same room at 2:30 tomor row afternOon; the conference will :feature "Good PraCtices in :Curriculurn Planning" ,as its •toplei.'and will be, presided over :.C: Swan, • Superinten derit. of. the Perry County Schools, NOT Bloomfield. Virectly following this session, a Meeting of county school super .iritendents• will take .place. at 4 p. m in . ; room 1211: Sparks. . institute's r annual . dinner wsll ibe at the Nittany Lion Inn at .6:130 tomorrow evening. Walter Douthert, Darby Superinr tendent , 'of Schools,. •be •toast mlarter. Dinner. tickets at $1:65 ,per. plate may' be purchased at :the registration desk. ; • Winding up the conference on -Thursday, • two sessions will be 'held. The: first will be the fifth seSsion entitled "Gciod Practices in 'the Use of Schools in - the Edu •eation of Adult and Out of School \Youth." Presiding at this..meeting will be Dean S. P. Franklin of the University of Pittsburgh's School of Education. .. ,Concluding. the conference, the, sixth session will be handled by, Prof. Wtilliarn . S. Vincent, of the College and 'Good Pnactices in Meeting Fiscal Needs of School Districts" will be discussed. Wilde Sets August Date For 'Garden Days' Tours . • First , "Garden JDaYs" since .1941 have been 'designated for 8,._9, and 10 by,Dr. Earle I. Wilde,, professor 'of •ornamental hortle'ul ture. On these days any garden clubs in the State may tour the College flower gardens. • Dr. Wilde scheduled "Garden Days" this year as a result of many calls by garden clulbs to misit at the campus. Recently 30 members of the Du.shore Garden Clufb toured the College experi 'mental garden plots. Their tour was arranged by Sullivan county agent J. W. Learn. ,_ittutOr'..oltrgititt PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY MORNING by the SI ence by Pres. Ralph D. Hetzel. once each year by the School 46 To Report For Football Coach Bdb :Higgins . said today he would drvite-.16. players ;to rs.- Port for pre-season football' drills at Penn State beginning August 19. He added that backs and line men were about evenly . divided on the list. Predominating on the. squad vnill be, approximately„ 345, plaYeis from , • pre-ovar squads. No :fresh men have .been invited since of ficials already have , announced that first-year students "will be assigned to State Teachers Col,. ,leges and - other off -'carniPils .:cert .ters for-rbheir,first ; year,„„Nß pleibes 'admitted .the eaMpliS. Jim (YHora, ,of Dunmore, and Earl Bruce, iof -Brdwhaville, both newcomers to the coed - lank staff, will join -other_ mernbers' of the staff at the 'one'ning session. Hig gins 'staid morning and afternoon sessions had already been c!hantedi, and that a. third session may be added ifor the weeks preceding the °opening of college. The first game will .he played at home against iHueknell October Timetables . . . tfor fall seinCester courses are availaibile fat the Armory. , . .• • A tt i t u de . . i • • . Espada .Cites..Bo Bo liv i an tor. Joaquin Espada, former Bolivian government official , . who will return immedia tely to*La Paz, sees in the overthrow of the government of President Gualberto . Villarroel the expression. of- the strong democratic feeling of the Bolivian peOple. . Dr. Epada, who held positions as Minister . of Finance, Treasury and Statistics, Govern ment, and War at various times during the period from 1932 to 1943, narrowly escaped death in the coup of. Decembei vember, 1945, he has been tea "The relations between Sol were under the Villarroel regi the (feeling oi; the people of Bo livia," Dr : Evade said.. • He , aclicled that he itho.ughtt the establishmer4 of the newl'govern- melt will result also in better relations with the other 'counties of 'S'oulth ukm.erica. Bolivians Want Liberty Dr. Eapada pointed out tbat not dne group, ilaut repre.4ntatives •of vroi4kers, indUstry, agriculture, students,. and teachers were unit ed. in ,the •revolution all because they . wanted liberty. Branding the Villarroel regime' as iFascisitile, Dr. Espada ..saidthree reasons •prompted , the , people to establish .the new • government: iNPurder .without trial of leaders 'af parties, Ilnany govern ment officilals,* and Wiens in Bo ll:Via aster the December, 1143', coup; (2) The knowledge that .Vill arroel was grooming Major Mos Belmonte Patron to succeed hLr in .1.948; (3) The love of the people,:fur a democratic !form of governiment. TUESDAY !MORNING, JULY 30, 1946-STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA PSEA Leaders Meet at College The first annual workshop of the Pennsylvania State Educa tion Association local branch leaders will begin Thursday at the College. The local lebders from the various chapters of PIMA are meeting in a two-day conference to discuss problems and future plans. Following registration at 7 p. in., Thursday, Miss Cathleen M. Champlin, president of the Phil adelphia PSEA, will open the first general session. Rlalph Mc- Donald; executive secretary of the Department of Higher Edu cation, will discuss leadership re sponsibilities• •in local . associa tions. . "Public Relations—A Key to Success" will be the topic of Bernhard Ragner, director of public .- relations of the Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce. Guy N. Ilarriger, chairman of the PiSEA Committee on Local Branches, outline the purpose of the workshop.••• • An informal social hour will be. held at the State College Country Club at 9:60 p.m. Members of the Committee •on Local' Branches will be hoSts. The second general session will open g.t.9 a.m. Friday; with a lec ..turerlay`A;-elloiri-MoSei;;Altreetor Of research,_ entitled "PSEA Serv ice to Salary - Committees," whiCh will be followed' by a talk on "Hew to Use the Legal'Service of the .PSEA" by Lewis F. Adler, PSEA attorney. Then the repre sentatives of district and county local branches will form their own sectional meeting,s to discuss budget and dues, member partici-. pation, interest, and similar 10- . calized problems. C. O. Williams , director of edu cation extension, will preside at a luncheon at 12:115 p.m. at the State College Hotel. The princi pal speakers will be Dean M. R. Trabue, School of Education, Willis E. Pratt, heiad of the de- 1943, when "President Vill'arroel Came to power, Since 'No thing Spanish at the Pennsylvania. State College. ' ivia and the United States now will be more friendly than they e, not only because of economic relations, but because of Major Elias Belimonite Pabon, according. to Dr. Espada; is an agent of the Gestapo with resi dence in Lisbon, who is. attempt ing to linik Nazi spies in Europe and South America. Axis. Ousts President The ousting of President Pln rique Peniaranda on Decemfber 20, 1.943,' by a swift military coup was the work of young . Army oV. Tigers who, 'according Ito Dr. Es pada were 'closely associated with the ..Akis ip.owers and desired to (block Dillytan cooperation! with the United States.. . Dy. Espada escaped titie, country and found •sataty. in the Peruvian EmlbasaY,' hut his home and val uable documents from the Chaco War were destroyed Government .controlled newspapers, he says, printed hiS picture .and listed him among the marry .government oC ficials that had been killed. His wife, Senora Lenor Espada, thud es.caued to Buenos Airels, where their three tchildren are students. She later accompanied her :11—tuterbd. to this country. 'MDR COLLEGIAN STAFF Michigan State English Head Succeed Dr. Dr. Ben Euwema, head of English and director of lan guages and literature at Michigan 'State College, was named new Dean of Liberal Arts at a recent meeting of.the trustees. Dr. Euwema succeeds Charles. W. Stoddart, who retired one year ago but returned in May after the death of Acting Dean Charles C. Wagner. He is author of .two published.. works, Social and Ethical Theories of George Eliot, University of Chicago Press, 1936; and A Year's Work in Composition, Odyssey Press,- 1940. . A member of the Ameri can Association of University Professors, Dr. Euwema also belongs to Phi Kappa Phi and the People's Church. Born on May 3, 1904, the new dean received his B.A. in philos ophy and Greek at Calvin Col lege in 1925 and his M.A. in phil .osophy and English at the Uni versity of Michigan a year later. He got his PhD. in English at the University of Chicago in 1934. In the winter of 1928, mean while; he began to teach as an in structor in the University of Chi cago Evening School. That same year he started to teach at West minster College. Advancing from an instructor in English composi tion and assistant professor to department head and professor in 1036. Calendar TODAY Superintendends and Principals Conference. - Topic: "Goods Prac tdces in Meriting the Needs of the Returning Veteran." 1 1 211 , Sparks, 2 p.m. Motion picture program, "Mac . - beth" and "Master Wild Shakes peare." 11 1 0 Sparks, 4:30 p.m. Co-recreational ,swim pfanliy. Ad mission by matriculation card. ,Glennland Pool, 7 p.m. Superintendents and Principals Concrerence....Speaker: Hon. ICiande Pepper, ' United States Senator from Florida. Schwab auditorium,' 7:30 p.m. TOMORROW Superintendents and Principals Conference. Topic: '"Good Pric- Aces-Effective •Guidande- Piegram." 121 Sparks, 9:30 a.m. Superintendents and Principals Conference. Topic: "Good Prac tices in Curriculum Planning." 121 Sparks, 2 p.m. Meeting of County Superinten dents of Schools. 121 Sparks. 4 p.m. Summer Dames picnic for wives of graduate students and 'their husbands. Holmes-Foster Park, 6 p.m. Superintendents and Pfincipals Conference Dinner. Nittany Lion Inn, 6:30 p.m. •. Bridge party. Reservations can be made by calling Extension 86- M. Atherton Hall lounge, 7:30 p.m. (Continued on page three) Headed Bolivian Delegation Dr. Esi;ada - , as Minister of Fi nance, headed a delegation that arrived tin Washington on" July 5, 1942, to .discuss economic coop eration between Bolivia and this country. The delegation was in strumental • in establishing the Bolivian Development , Corpora tion which was under joint Boliv ian-United States management and partially. financed — by this Country. The corporation prim - mite& the building of:highways and devel oped •petroleum and agricultural resources; •tinis: 'stimulating the production of tin, tungsten, anti mony, rubber, and quinine, all vi tal war 'materials that were Ship ped to this country. During his time in State Col lege, Dr. Espada, in addition too his .duties as part-time instructor in Spanish, has been writing an economic geography of Latin- Airnerica which he plans to have published when he returns to La Paz. . Summer Session Dance SUBSCRIPTION soc Stoddart ..._„Erom,_l936 to 1937 .he was .ati: associate profesSor . at Kent School of Journalism, after which he served a't Michigan State College. From 1937 to 1939 he was assis tant professor and director of freshman English. For the next three years he was associate pro fessor. In 1942 he was named professor and acting head of the English dePartment, a position he held for three years. In 1943 he became professor and head of the department .of literature and fine arts. From 1943 to 1945 he also became act ing director of the division of languages and literature an.dp in 1945 head of .English and. director of languages and literature. In addition to naming• a new dean, the College Board of Trus tees announced the following: A bequest to the College in the amount of $5OOO , from the estate of Vance McCormick, late vice president of the board and a member since 1:908, will be re ceived. The use of its income will be for "assisting needy and meri torious students to obtain an edu cation at the College, according to suoh method of selection as may from time to time be deter mined by the Trustees." The Penn State Interclass Bud get- System contributed $3,720 to ward the cost of erecting an ad= • dition to the ski lodge. A gift of $1650 froni the Class of June 1946 to be used for the • completion •of the Old Main mural. Charles D. Prutzman • of the Class of 1918 presented 300 shares of common stock of Uni versal Pictures Co., Inc. ' for the (Continued. on page four) Gross Elected Burgess By Windcrest Residents . Stanley C. Gross, burgess of Winderest for the spring semes ter, was re-elected burgess of the trailer community for the Sum mer Session et a recent meeting. Councilmen named were: James D. Magargee, president; Mrs. Ruth Livermore, secretary; and Howard Beaver, treasurer. Other councilmen elected, who will be assigned to duties at a later date, aro: John A. Irwin, Thomas Crawford, Paul B. Moyer, and Claude R. Butler. Illagargee, elected to the bor ough council in March, served' during the spring' semester.
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