Graduation Saturday i VOL. 25—ONTo. 6 [2OOO To Register In Post Session | Bursar Office Receives f Sfudenf Fees August 9 Approximately 200 students will attend the three and six '' week courses of the Post-Session, • according to Marion R. Trabue, ; director of Summer Sessions. ' > Students who have already re ’ gistered for the six-week post session ■ during main session ap plication period will attend Mon day morning classes as scheduled. ; First meetings of three-week courses for students who have al ’ .ready registered are scheduled ■ for Monday afternoon. Post-session registration for V those students who have not al ready filled out the necessary V forms will be in 1,2, and 3 Car ■ negie Hall, 8 a. m. to 12 noon, ■; Monday. . Fee's for the two post-sessions [..beginning Monday.-will be paid i at the Bursar’s office, 8 a. m. to 4 p. m., Wednesday August 13. >'• Women attehding the first i three-week session will obtain accomodations , in Women’s ■t. Building. Six-week students will ! reside at Grange Memorial Dor i'initory. ' - j , The final three-week post-ses : sibn is listed for September 2 to ■ September 20. Students planning to attend who have, not pre . viously registered should enroll , at, 102 Burrowes or 207 Buckhout, V 8 a. m. to 12 noon, Tuesday Sep ■i'tember 2. Fees , for these, courses ■ are payable at the Bursar’s Of- 8 a. m. to 4 p. :m. September •■■■A - ■■■ ' - Student? Operate Book Exchange '■/, The Student; Book Exchange ■ -will open in the basement of Ir vviii Hall, at 1:30 o’clock tomor- Jrow after non, Jane Weigle, chair fman of the Book Exchange com tmittee, said today. , . , The exchange is operated... for f^thevbenefit of the students, Miss t stated. Each student de f termines the' price for which he .' will sell his book, usually 60per ycent of the purchase price. Vet- Perans may -purchase books at ..the Exchange as book cards .are ac .fcepted,; •• .wili be accepted for P;sale;.from;l:3o to-. 4:30 p. m. .to p,morrpw,.-'£(nd l:30 r to-4:40' p. m. ’^Saturday.;'-}Books, will..be -sold .■,from ; 9. a, m. till; noon; and 1:30 to 30. pP ni: : Monday and 'if .The-Student Book -Exchange is ■ in • the East end of the - dormitory. Students are to enter the door opposite Beecher House. Time Course - A.H. . Com. Com. Com. Econ. - EcOn. E.M. ; FOr. ‘ For. I.E. Span. Speech Speech 18.07 15.18 60.18 60.18 14.24 14.24 13.29 504.35 508:35 315.48 3.87 200.88 200.88 ft I Rhys iPhys i.Phys fchys Hist' 235.75 g 235.75 h 285.75 g 285.75 h CHANGES IN ROOMS 583.25 Unit R 20.44 e 21.44 e 417.78 (Migran All graduating seniors are reminded that they must make arrangements for a La Vie photo and till out activities cards before they leave cam pus, Roberta Hutchison, editor, stated yesterday. Photos must be taken at the Photo Shop or else glossy prints must be turned in. Ac-, tivity cards may be picked up’ at Student Union. Debaters To Meet Oxford University Penn State will renew debat ing relations with Oxford Uni versity for the first time since before the war when the English squad comes to the United States next Fall for a three-month tour. A tentative date for the debate which will be conducted in Schwab Auditorium’ has been set for the evening of October 22, ac cording to Harris Gilbert, foren sics council president. . The Men’s Debating > Team, coached by Joseph F. O’Brian, professor of . public speaking, will take the affirmative on the sub ject: Resolved—that an era of war can best be averted by an all-purpose Anglo-American al liance. One of the three English de baters, David'K. Harris, will give a talk on Oxford University in Schwab Auditorium in the after noon of October 22. The other members of the team are Anthony , Wedgewood Benn, son of Viscount Stansgate who was the first ' secretary of state • for air- : for ' the labor : gov ernment, and. Sir Edward 1 Boyle,, ‘23-year •6id >: viscbupt:'wh6:.served in "the 'Foreign- Office" - during the war.' : " '' Fun Night Heads Program A' Fun Night, tennis, and golf are the recreation activities listed for post., session. -•••.- Fun Night at Recreation Hall, 8:30 to 11 p. m. August 22, will feature dancing to • recorded music, games,,, cards; and bad minton. Admission is free. Students who' purchased main session golf tickets may secure a post session ticket for $5. Tickets for other students are $lO. A single day’s play is seventy-fivei Cents. • Advance tennis . reservations will not be made l during the next six weeks. “First come, first served” will be the rule accord ing to the court manager. Table Changes Post Summer Session COURSES ADDED Sec. Credit ’ 1-6 COURSES DROPPED ♦ PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE STUDENTS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE AUGUST, 1947—STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA La Vie Photos Room 203 Ag 125 Sp 129 Sp 129 Sp 129 Sp 113 Sp 101 EngA 102 For 102 Eng 201 Eng C 234 Sp 127 Sp 127 Sp 128 Sp 304 Sp 304 Sp 236 Sp 246 to Receive Degrees In Schwab Commencement Dorms to Exclude Married Women Married women will not be permitted to live ii. College dor mitories, Pearl O. Weston, dean of women, said today. The rul ing goes into effect in September. Married women students now living on campus were notified in May that they would have to find new accomodations before the Fall semester. Two of these women had expected to return to dormitory rooms. The ruling, which was in effect since women students were ad mitted to the College, had been set aside during the war when marriages of women students sharply’ increased, the dean ex plained. Insufficient room accommoda tions for unmarried women seek ing entrance to the College and a steady decrease in undergrad uate women’s marriages have brought about the recall of the regulation.' Dr. Weston said. The office of the Dean of Wo men will aid married women al ready registered to find rooms in town. Married woman may still be admitted to the College if they do. not expect to live in Col lege 'dormitories, she added. ~ DeleptesAlfend NSOConvenfion Four delegates from the Col lege will- convene with students from almost every college and university in the United States when they attend the Constitu tional Convention of the National Student Organization at the Uni versity of Wis consin , August 30 through Sep tember 7. The delegates who were elected by All- College Cabinet are Jane Four acre, Eugene Fulmer, Allan Ostar, and Rob ert Tro x e 11. Troxell is act- . ing head of the TROXELL Penn State delegation. Purposes of the' Convention will be: 1. To establish basic purposes of the NSO, and to plan various national, regional, and campus activities to achieve these pur poses. ■2. To approve a constitution for the NSO. 3. To elect national officers of the NSO' s and to provisionally elect regional officei’s. 4. To establish a budget and fix assessments of participating student bodies. Period Appt. Herald Tribune Publishes 'Freshman Farm 7 Article An expert’s estimate of Penn State’s “freshman farm” plan will be published Sunday in the education section of the New York Herald-Tribune. The author, Wiliam G. Avirett, was a visitor to the campus dur ing the past week and he inter viewed Dr. Ralph D. Hetzel, president of the College, William S. Hoffman, registrar, Arthur R. Warnock, dean of men and other administrators interested in ■ this program. Avirett, who is education edi tor of the Herald-Tribune won the Helms Foundation Award this year for “distinguished ser vice in the interpretation of edu cational trends.” t Degrees will be conferred on 246 main session graduates at com mencement exercises in Schwab Auditorium, 10 o’clock Saturday morning, ■by Marion R. Trabue, director of Summer Sessions and Dean of the School of Education. The principal address at the graduation, “What Road Are We On?” will be delivered by Judge Harold C. Kessinger, of Ridgewood, N. J. Burns, Robb Families Attend Classes Together Two more-family, combinations on carnptis ; ,(once called-“rare co incidences” lay'ibe Summer Col legian) were revealed this week. Mrs. Blanche Burns, a teacher for nearly ten years, is studying this summer with her son, Mur ray. Taking education courses, Mrs. Burns is working on a BA degree. Murray Burns, a senior ma-jor ing in pre-law, will enter law school -in the Fall. Mrs. Philemon Robb is attend ing psychology classes in Bur rowes while her son, Richard, studies ceramics. The Robbs are planning a trip to California fol owing Richard’s graduation Sat urday. Other family combinations on campus' this' Summer are Mrs. Doris Von Neida and son “Whitey,” basketball star, and Ray V. Laudenslager and daugh ter Jill. McCarthy Sees War Peril; Opposes Universal Training United States is now “at war” with Russia, but the shouting will be avoided if we can get cooperation from the Soviet Union, declared Joseph R., McCarthy, U. S. Senator from Wisconsin, in his Schwab Auditorium address on Universal Training. McCarthy, Marine veteran, addressing members of the superin tendents and principals conference, vigorously opposed universal military training as being inadequate for present warfare. “Instead of training masses,” he said, “we should devote our money to scientific research to learn about guided missiles, bac teriological warfare, and defenses against modern weapons ” No "Human War" Stressing the fact that future wars would be won through bac teriological warfare, the senator declared that we cannot have a “human war.” Passage of the Universal Mili tary Training bill, according to McCarthy, will mean either an Degrees will be conferred on HAROLD C. KESSINGER Catalogs Needed All students who no longer have need for their copies of the . 1947 Summer Sessions Catalog or the Announcement of the Graduate School are asked to leave them at the Stu dent Union desk in Old Main. Posf Session SEVEN CENTS 134 bachelor candidates, including 50 bachelor of arts and 84 bach elor of science awards. Master degrees will be presented to 103 students, and doctorates to nine applicants. Bachelor of arts degrees will be awarded to 43 students in liberal arts and seven in educa tion. Bachelor of science diplomas ipclude seven in agriculture, 16 in chemistry and physics, 15 in education, 40 in engineering, two in .mineral industries, and four in physical education. Graduation Procedure Graduates will assemble on Old Main terrace at 9:40 a. m. Saturday, and the procession will move promptly at 9:50 a. m. Faculty members participating in the program will meet at the south side entrance of Schwab Auditorium at 9:40 a. m. In case of rain, graduates will convene in the second floor lounge, Old Main, and faculty members in 104 Old Main. Costumes in Burrowes Academic costumes should be picked up in the basement mail ing room, Burrowes, Friday af ternoon or Saturday morning and should be turned in when the exercises are completed. Plans for post session gradua tion exercises . havenbt’ been' completed, according to the Sum mer Sessions office. Batchelor Win Wafer Color Prize “Bird Heaven,” a water color painting by William A. Batchelor, was awarded first prize in the 20th annual exhibit- which will be open to the public in 303 Main Engineering, 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. for the last time today. Second and third, winners were “Moonlight” by William G Fad dis and “Slow Freight” by Char les R. Reynolds. Honorable men tions went to “Willow Tree, New Jersey” by E. L. Pagenstecher and “Blue Tanks” by Morton I. Cohn. Judges included Milton S. Os borne, head of the department of architecture; Harold E. Dick son, professor of fine arts; and M. Dean Ross, assistant professor of fine arts. The paintings were products of the summer water color painting class of Andrew W. Case, asso ciate professor of fine arts. The canvases, which portray all dir ections of contemporary. art, are for sale. appropriation of an additional four or five million dollars for the Army or taking some of its pres ent much-needed funds. The number of men do not in dicate military strength, McCar thy said, pointing out that experts declared France powerful because of her large land army, yet she was weakened in 70 hours in the last war. “These same experts,” said the (Continued on page eight) issue
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