FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1041 Council Supports Racial Equality Support of the recommenda tions submitted by President Truman's committee on civil rights was voted at the meeting of the State College Council on Racial Equality last night. Representatives of 39 State College and College campus or ganizations went on record to express their "appreciation for the courageous" report presented to the nation yesterday by the committee on civil rights. Dr. William G. Mather, acting chairman of the Council, and Miss Frances Welker, acting se cretary, were authorized to write congratulatory letters to Presi dent Truman and to Charles E. Wilson, chairman of the civil rights committee. The letters were placed in the mail this morning. The Council's letters termed the committee's report "frank and challenging." "We hope to see A shortly im plemented by action, and pledge our support to securing in our own community 'the same rights for every person regardless of who he is, where he lives, or what his . racial, religious, or national origins are," declared the pledge of support. Engineer %den! Council To Discuss Class Rafing Engineering Student Council will meet in 106 M. Eng., 7 p.m., November 4, George F. Bearer, president, said today. Tentative plans to form a class rating program will be discussed. Under this program the council will formulate a series of ques tions concerning the contents of the various courses being taught in the school of engineering. Other plans under discussion concern the publication of an En gineering Student Council News Letter which will be devoted to topics concerning the student en gineer. • PENI G the FRESH Dark Milk COLLEGE ICE CREAM Faculty News Two members of the depart ment of psychology have been named contributors to national and international publications. Dr. C. R. Adams, associate pro fessor of psychology, has been appointed contributor on Mar riage and Divorce for the Britan nica Book of the Year. Dr. Adams also contributed this chapter to the 1947 edition. Dr. C. R. Carpenter, professor of psychology, recently accepted an appointment as .one of the American Editors of the Inter national Journal of Behavior. New Clinic Head Dr. George E. Murphy, who has been named director of the College Reading Clinic as well as associate professor of education, formerly served as dean of men at Humboldt State College, Ar cata, Calif. Dr. Murphy has taught in the grade and high schools of North Dakota and Washington, and has instructed at Menlo Junior Col lege, Stanford University, and Rutgers University. • Delivers Addresses Dr. Chester D. Dahle, profes sir in charge of dairy manufac turing, delivered two acle--ces before the convention of the In ternational Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers in Miami Beach, Fla., early this week. Faculty Luncheon Club Five members of the faculty and staff were named to the Steering Committee of the Fac ulty Luncheon Club at meeting this week. Those chosen include Dr. S. Lewis Land, professor of indus trial education and director of vocational teacher education; Dr. Kenneth V. Manning, assistant professor of physics; Milton S. Osborne, head of the denartmert of architecture; Amy G. Gard ner, associate professor of home economics and art education; Vera L. Moyer, cataloguer in the College Library. AFA Officer Prof. C. W. IVtorisette of the MONDAY candy cane HOME MADE CANDY Chocolates Chocolates -- now delicious KIND OF CHOCOLATE While FRESH DOUBLE K NUTS 01 the cand cane Slate Theatre Bldg . y THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA School of Engineering has been elected vice chairman of the na tional apprentice contest com mittee, of American Foundry men's Association, according to Chicago headquarters of the in ternational technical society of the castings industry. Adult E ucation Confarane• Hugh G. Pyle, supervisor of Informal Instruction of the Col lege Extension Services, is in Baltimore this week serving as co-chairman of the University Extension Committee at the fall work-survey conference of the NEA Adult Education Depart ment. The work of the conference in the current session is to studi and evaluate the entire adult education program of the city of Baltimore. Also in Baltimore and a Mem ber of Mr. Pyle's committee is J 0. Keller, in charge of Extensior at the College. Serving on the Coordination and Evalua tior. Committee is Dr. Rose Cologne. adult education specialist in the College Extension service. Programs Open In College (enters ROTC programs have been se• up in three more of the College'r undergraduate centers at Dußois Hazelton, and Pottsville, announc ed Captain Irwin A. Hirsch yes terday. Personnel of the ROTC train ing school at the College, will go to these undergraduate centers and take charge of non-veteran Penn State assignees enrolled in the newly organized program. Other undergraduate centers and state teachers colleges, affil iated with the College, already active in the ROTC program are at Altoona, California, East Stroudsburg. Kutztown, Mans field and Mont Alto. West College Ave. Newfoundland Hawk Makes His Home In Beta House By Elliot Krone Many college students have hobbies such as stamp collecting, photography, dr hunting, but the distinction for having one of the most unique and fascinating hob bies on campus goes to Richard McCowan who raises hawks for the ancient sport of falconry. McCowan, a seventh semester L.A. student, keeps his hawk in Line basement of the Beta Theta Pi house and trains it every af ternoon on the College golf .:ourse. "I've been interested in birds ever since 1935," stated MaCow an. "My brother bezari raising hawks then and I took an in terest in the sport while working with him. Falconry is not a fly by-night fad," continued Mc- Cowan. "The first record of fly ing birds for sport was in the year 5000 B.C. in China. From there it went to India, then to the Middle East. During the Cru -,ade.s falconry was brought to England and was popularized as a sport for the 'elite' of the king's court." "Mercury," McCowan's latest catch, was hatched in Newfound land and was caught on its way to the Carribean.. "Training a falcon is a long, hard process," stated Dick. "In order to be '.rained properly, the bird should receive instruction from its first lay of captivity." "Hooding is the first process in braining," he continued. "The gird must be made to feel de pendent upon you. After acclim ating it to hand feeding, the bird is taken outside and given a chance to fly at the end of a cord. Daily practice with a lure, pidgeon wings on a weight, pre pare the bird for actual free flights. Having spent hours of patient training, the falconer realizes his goal when he sends his bird aloft without any shackles, sets a pig eon free, and then sees the fal con come screeching down from over 5,000 feet to claim its meal. "The particular bird that I have now." commented McCow an, is a Duck Hawk, noted for its bold flight and speed. Some falcons have been timed at 180 miles per hour in a dive which is faster than any other bird or ani mal in the world." McCowan's bird caused a little excitement on the lacrosse field last year. He was flying the hawk during a practice scrim mage, when suddenly it swooped down between the players. The lacrossemen couldn't decide if the ball had taken wings or if they were being attacked from the air. Explaining the situation, McCowan claimed his feathered fury and from then on he di rected the bird's flights away from the lacrosse games. NOW AT YOUR WARNER THEATER 0 060# 4, cio v 4a twig olg e '0 5511 I -Hate • - ci p . C4e / ; • t•r% r- 200461 -- it - 00T) ~.001.11 Of 11. . - dim PAGE mit Magazine Group Honors 'Engineer' Domenico Bibbo, editor -in chief, and George Bearer, man aging editor of the Penn State Engineer received various honors on behalf of the magazine at the Engineering Colleges Magazine Association Convention held at Ann Arbor, Michigan October 17 and 18. The Engineer was awarded a third place for feature articles and honorable mentions for merit in competition with college engi neering magazines from all over the country. In commenting on the magazine George Bealtie, chairman of the convention, told the representa tives that the Engineer is one of the best all-around engineering magazines in the country. Standardized general advertis ing and new methods of printing college publications highlighted the discussion at the convention. Late AP News Courtesy Radio Station WMAJ Red Probe Recesses WASHINGTON—The Congres sional investigation of Commu nism in Hollywood recessed after the testimony of Louis Russell, a former FBI operative, who as serted that in 1942 a Russian vice-consul mace unsuccessful ef forts to obtain highly secret in formation from atom bomb expert J. Robert Oppenheimer. But the committee produced no evidence that motion picture stars or other Hollywood persons were con nected directly with the alleged espionage. Gets Governorship SALEM, Oregon—Following the death of Governor Earl Snell in an airplane crash, speaker of the State House of Representatives, John Hall, is getting set to take over the governorship. The posi tion falls to Hall because Gover nor Snell's successor, State Senate President Marshall Cornett, also died in the crash. Other crash victims were the plane's pilot and another state official. U. S. Officers Accused LONDON—Britain has rejected a Bulgarian complaint that Brit. ish protests against the execution of Nikola Petkov, leader of the opposition in Bulgaria, impinged on Bulgarian sovereignty. Commission Approved BUCHAREST A Romanian military court heard testimony yesterday that two American offi cers in Romania had been in close contact with members of an unc erground movement. The wit ness, lon De Mocsony-Styrcea, was one of 19 defendants before the court on conspiracy charges. He asserted that the under- :ound movement aimed at the violent overthrow of the Commu nist-led government in Bucharest. The American officers, he said, were attached to the American military mission in Romania. An other defendant in the trial is Dr. Juliu Maniu, 75-year-old peasant party leader. Rejects Complaint LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.—The United Nations Politlcal Commit tee has approved an American proposal for a UN commission on Korea. The commission is design ed to facilitate and expe ite con sideration of Ko"ean indepen dence. Russia and the Slav bloc of nations did not vote on the com mission plan. Nominal:ons Oran Today or Chem-P:ris rourd Sophomores in the School of Chemistry and Physics with at least a 1 average are now eligible for nomination to the Chemistry and Physics Council, Robert Schock. president, said today. Students in any curricula in the School may nominate them selves by leaving their names and addresses on a list in Dr. G. C. Chandlee's office. 105 Pond Lab. The list may be obtained from Dr. Chandlee's secretary Monday through Friday of next week. Six sophomores from this group will be elected to the council at a date to be announced later.