The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, June 29, 1949, Image 1

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Published Weekly By Students of The P
VOL. 27—No. 2
PSCA Names Harshbarger
New Executive Secretary
Luther Henry Harshbarger, until recently engaged in prisoner
of-war work with the World’s YMCA in Germany, has been named
executive secretary of the Penn State Christian Association, effec
tive September 1. He replaces James T. Smith, who resigned from
the post a year ago.
The appointment was announced by* bit’Jatfied H. Moyer,
chairman of the Board of Direc
tors, who also stated that Mar
jorie Allen, who joined the staff
as associate secretary last year,
would continue her work here.
The appointments of George L.
Earnshaw and Patricia M. Woods
as assistant secretaries termin
ated at the close of the semester.
Harshbarger, who is an or
dained minister of the Church
of the Brethren, was born in
Mifflin County, attended Lewis
town high school, and was grad
uated from MvVeytown high
school. He attended Millersville
State Teachers College, Bethany
Biblical Seminary School of
Music, and received his bachelor
of arts degree at McPherson Col
lege, McPerson, Kansas.
Entering Yale Divinity School
in 1939, Harshbarger received a
bachelor of divinity degree. He
has also taken graduate work at
the Temple University School of
Theology and recently completed
a term at Yale Divinity School.
At McPherson College, Harsh
barger served as assistant to the
Dean of. Men and director of the
Employment Bureau From 1942-
44, he was pastor of the Church
of the Brethren at Ambler and
from 1945 until 1949, he was as
sociated with the World’s YMCA
in prisoner-of-war work. He was
assistant director in Great Britain
for 6 months, senior representa
tive in Belgium and the Nether
lands for two years, and director
for Germany for two more years.
Unsafe Trailer
Removal Starts
Work on dismentling unsafe
trailers in Windcrest has started
and about 50 of the units will
be removed before the opening
of the Fall semester.
Russell E. Clark, director of
housing at the College, explain
ed that an inspection of all trail
ers in the area has revealed a
large number have rotten and
sagging floors, and. damaged
roofs and walls, and are beyond
repair.
Many others are in bad shape,
but it is hoped that by utilizing
parts salvaged from the worst
trailers, these can be continued
in use through the next winter.
Many of the trailers are 10 years
old, having been used for defense
housing before they were brought
to the campus four years ago.
Some of them were hauled from
the East coast to Kansas and
then returned to the East coast.
Clark explained that the work
started this summer would mark
the beginning of the end of the
camp. As trailers become unsafe,
and hazards to the health of the
veterans and their families oc
cupying them, they will be grad
ually removed. He explained that
the removals would be handled
in a systematic manner, but with
due regard for the needs of the
families living there. It is ex
pected that the village, establish
ed in 1945 to fulfill the promises
of the College to veterans who
interrupted their college work to
Serve in the armed forces, will
be disbanded by June, 1951.
Juba Urges Safety
John R. Juba, chief of the State
College police department, asks
summer school students to co
operate in observing parking and
traffic regulations. Many drivers
who are new in the town may
not be well acquainted with these
rules and it is important for both
newcomers and drivers who qre.
gjniliar with the regulations to
STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA—WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 29, 1949
Harshbarger
Programs Open
Main Session
Recreation Slate
Mixed swimming, bridge and
group singing opened the recrea
tional program of the 1949 Main
Summer Session last night. Un
der the direction of C. M. Sykes,
the program goes into full swing
tomorrow with a Summer Ses
sion reception in White Hall.
A bike hike is planned for Mon
day from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m.
Saturday will be the final dajf
for the purchase, of tickets for
the affair. The tickets are on sale
at the Bicycle Rental Agency at
401 E. College avenue, or reser
vations can be made by dialing
4200. The tickets, which cost one
dollar, include the price of a
lunch.
Mixed swimming will take the
spotlight Monday from 2 till 5
p.m. in the Glennland Pool. Ad
mission is free, but swimmers
are requested to bring their own
suits. Towels and lockers will be
furnished, however.
Men’s swimming continues to
day in the Glennland Pool from
3 to 5 p.m. The pool is available
for men students every after
noon, Monday through Friday,
at that time. Towels and lockers
are provided, and no charge will
be levied.
Today at 3:30 p.m., the swim
ming pool at White Hall is open
for women enrollees. Tickets,
costing two dollars, must be pur
chased at the Bursar’s Office in
Old Main to cover the cost of
towels and lockers. The White
Hall pool will be open for
women from 7:30 to 9 p.m. to
morrow, and from 3:30 to 5 p.m.
Friday and Monday.
Summer Orchestra
Begins Rehearsals
The Summer Sessions Orches
tra, conducted by James M. Dun
lop, associate professor of music
education, wiU have its first re
hearsal “in 117 Carnegie Hall, 3
p.m. today.
The Summer Band, also under
Dunlop’s baton, 'will meet in the
same room at 7 p.m. Regular re
hearsals are also scheduled for
Mondays at 3 p.m.
All students are eligible to be
come'members of the group, the
dinautoshadda. and all those inter
esfecr shouSi report to ’ the re
beaasala.
LA School Adds
New 4-Year
Curriculum
A new four-year curriculum
in labor - management relations,
specifically designed to meet the
needs of Pennsylvania business
and''industry, was announced on
June 1 at the College by James
Milholland, acting president.
Labor leaders and managerial
personnel from all parts of the
State co-operated with College
officials in a two-year prelimi
nary study of the best combina
tion of courses for students seek
ing careers, in this field.
“The result,” President Mil
holland explains, “is a curricu
lum built to practical specifica
tion • supplied by management
and labor. It will not turn out
finished experts on labor-man
agement relations, but it will
provide young men and women
with a sound educational foun
dation for such a career.”
To receive a degree in this cur
riculum, students are expected
to obtain practical experience by
working in some business or in
dustry for a total of at least three
months before completing their
senior year. Graduates of the
curriculum will seek careers in
some phase of labor-management
relations with industry, with la
bor unions, with government
agencies, or as teachers.
Although the curriculum will
be offered by the School of Lib
eral Arts and lead to a bachelor
of arts degree, it will be admin
istered by an inter-school com
mittee. Dr. Ben Euwema, dean of
Continued on page eight
Group Elects
Seven Trustees
Furman H. Gyger, Jr., of Kim
berton, and six incumbents were
elected to three-year terms as
trustees of the College early this
month.
Alumni re-elected George H.
Deike, Pittsburgh; William D.
Harkins, Philadelphia; and James
B. Long, Blue Bell.
Delegates of agricultural and
industrial socities re-elected D.
Norris Benedict, Waynesboro;
John H. Light, Annville; and Wil
liam S. Tiffany, Harrisburg..
Gyger, who was elected by the
agricultural and industrial so
ciety delegates, replaces J. Eric
Linde, who had served on the
Board since 1943. Gyger, Sr., had
served on the Board from 1926
until his death, June 17, 1948.
A graduate of the College in
dairy husbandry in the Class of
1937, Gyger while an undergrad
uate was president of Alpha Gam
ma Rho, a member of-the Block
and Bridle and was active in'
the Glee Club, Thespians, and thej
Christian Association.
Votes received by each candi
date were Deike, 3460; Harkins,
3157; Long 3155; Grover C.
Chandlee, State College, 2853;
Helen Pletcher Manwiller, Pitts
burgh, 1942: and S. K. Stevens,
State College, 1835.
41 NROTC Students
On Atlantic Cruise
More than 2800 men, including
41 NROTC student from the Col
lege and Mont Alto, are partic
ipating in six-weeks on the
TJSS Missouri and other ships of
Task Force 61.
Leaving the United States June
6, the men visited Portsmouth,
England, and toured other British
towns. They will return to this
country about July 25 by way of
Cuba.
Hats and Keys
New members of Blue Key
and Parmi Nous hat societies
may pick up hats and keys in
102 Old Main. Shingles must
be signed by the officers, and
will not be available until fall.
’IiNNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE
Main Session Reception
In White Hall Tomorrow
The annual Summer Session Reception and Dance will be
given in White Hall from 8 to 11 p.m. tomorrow, according to Mis?
Marie Haidt, associate professor of physical education and general
chairman of the affair.
Operi to staff members, students, and guests, the affair wl be
admission-free and dress is informal. All women wifi be granted t 2
o’clock permissions.
Orchestra to Phr
Music for the dance, to be MCI
in the gymnasium, wilt be pro
vided by Don Peebie’s Orches
tra from Harrisburg. Other ac
tivities planned by the commit
tee include bridge and table
games.
Flowers and greens wifi domi
nate the decorations, ot which
Edward Mattil is chairman, and
the gymnasium wifi be adorned
with balloons and cut-outs.
Guests will be received in fire
Play Room in the east end at be
building by Acting President and
Mrs. James MfihoHand, Dead and
Mrs. M. R. Trabue, Dr. and lbs. B,
C. Weaver, Dr. and Mrs. fieaUk EL
Kern, Dean Pearl O. Weston, and
Dean and Mrs, A. R. Wtmmmk.
Refreshments will be served is
105, in the treat end si fim
building.
Parking FaCKCfca
Since parking facgfilß use
limited in this area ot fiae oast
pus, the committee desires find
automobile traffic be reduced fr
a minimum. The nearest tinge
parking lot is located to the Mr
of Osmond Laboratory.
Committee members planning
the program are Miss Hatdt, Mm.
Trabue, Miss Amy Gardner, |Mss
Ellamae Jackson, Mrs. George
Free, John E. Miller, Clascncfe
Sykes, and W. K. Reed.
Construction
About Campus
Nears Finish
Major construction work on the
campus is progressing nearly ac
cording to schedule except for
minor delays due to adverse
weather and a major tie-up due
to the carpenter strike report
George W. Ebert, director of the
department of Physical Plant,
and H. O. Meynor, director of
construction for the Common
wealth.
The College building program
and that of the Commonwealth
are seperate items since state
appropriations are not made for
financing construction for com
mercialized purposes.
The College’s program includes
the Navy water tunnel, Foods
building, Men’s dormitories and
dining hall, the storm sewer,and
erection of new stands and dress
ing rooms at New Beaver Field.
The Commonwealth project now
in force will be concluded with
the completion of the Plant In
dustries building, Willard Hall,
the Mineral Science building, and
work at the power plant.
Foods Building
The new Foods building, locat
ed across N. Atherton street di
rectly above the Greyhound Post
House, requires only minor in
terior finishing for completion.
Work is now at a standstill await-
(Continued on page eight)
Soloist To Open
Summer Session
Evelyn MacGregor, familiar to
radio listeners as featured soloist
on the American Album of
Familiar Music, American Mel
ody Hour, and Waltz Time, will
open the 1949 Summer Artists
Series in Schwab Auditorium,
July 6.
For several years Miss Mac-
Gregor was soloist with orchestra
leader Andre Kostelanetz. She
was introduced into radio by
Frank Hummed, head of one of
the largest program agencies.
For this summer’s concert tour,
Miss MacGregor’s program will
I include at least one operatic aria
and a number of her favorite
ballads which she has sung in her
radio appearances. Her program
will be listed in the next issue of
Summer Collegian.
Other artists to appear in the
Summer Artists Series are the
Ambassador Quartet and Swiss
Bell Ringers, July 12; La Meri
and her dance ensemble, July 20;
and the Ebonaires, July 28.
Tickets for the series, priced
at $2.40, can be purchased in 104
Burrowes. All seats are reserved.
Windcrest Borough
Elects Officials
The Borough of Windcrest, the
trailer village occupied by about
300 veterans’ families, on East
campus, recently elected the fol
lowing officials:
Burgess, Theodore Gilbert;
council members, Paul Achen
bach, David Christ, Marion Dop
pen, Letty Kechman. Kathleen
Kidder, Tomas Lauderdale and
George Wolff.
Newly elected directors of the
Co-op board are Paul Aehenbach.
David Christ, Harry Fuuch, Ken
neth Rhodes, George Smith, Ste
vea Szumski, and George Taylor.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Actors To Open
'Golden Boy 7
Town and Nine, Centre County’s
summer theater group, will open
the third week of their season on
July 4, with the production of
“Golden Boy” by Clifford Odets.
Directed by Portman Paget, the
play stars James Ambandos as
Golden Boy Joe Bonaparte, whose
struggle between the artistic and
materialistic elements of his soul
is the central theme of the work.
Concerned with prizefighting,
the play features Francine Toll as
Lorna Moone, the girl friend of
Joe’s manager and the girl with
whom he falls in love; Eddie Mc-
Coy as Mr. Bonaparte, Joe’s
father; Jane Stauss as Anna, Joe’s
sister; Dick Frontman as Fuselli,
a gangster interested in cutting in
as Joe shows promise as a fighter;
Walt Eckley as Tom Moody, Joe’s
manager; and Frank Fatsie as
Tokio, Moody’s trainer. The ele
ment of struggle in the play re
flects Odets’s idea that life is all
a kind of fight.
This play was originally pro
duced by the Group Theater in
New York, an experimental or
ganization which has produced
such actors as John Garfield. This
is the first time the play has been
given in arena production. Town
and Nine will stage it with a
I functional set and special light
en g effects.
I Reservations are now being ac
cepted, and may be obtained by
calling the box office.
PSCA spcn~ors
'Summer Shindig'
PSCA will sponsor an informal
mixer in 304 Old Main starting
at 7:30 tonight. The party is be
ing held in order to give summer
students an opportunity to get
acquainted.
The evening's entertainment
will begin with group singing
followed by a musical mixer and
relays. Square dancing will fill
til*? remainder of the evening
with Ed Wethgrald serving as
culler.
Everyone is invited ia TttriV