TEPTO§PitY , PLY 5, 1950 Infirmary Additions To Augment Facilities Additions to the College Infirmary will double the num ber of. beds ,and provide adequate space for dispensary and clinical services under one roof. Preliminary plans for an east and west wing have been approved by the Board of, Trustees of the College and College architects are now drawing up final plans. S. K. Hostetter, assistant to the President in charge of business and finance, announced recently that bids for construction will be asked as soon as the plans are completed. The dispensary, now located in the basernent of Old Main will be moved to the first floor Of the new west wing with an entrance from the west. Adjoining the foyer of the dispensary will be a large waiting room . with facili ties for as many as sixty students. New Offices Also located in this wing will be offices for the director, his secretary, a staff library, and small waiting and examining rooms. • Outlining the plans for the remainder of the dispensary wing, - Dr. Herbert R. Glenn, • di rector of the Health Service, pointed out that the active re cords room and main desk will adjoin the waiting room to-one side. The pharmacy will also be %located there. North of the wait ing room will be six treatment rooms, each with a small wait ing. alcove. There will also be con sultation rooms and an innocu lation room in the wing, while at the north end will be an ambu lance receiving platform to fa cilitate the moving of patients by ambulance. Second floor of the-west wing will include facilities for the den tist, psychiatrist, and for handling athletes, as well as a minor operating room. Dining Facilities The main floor of the east wing will inclUde dining facilities for the 'nurses which will be moved from th e base ment of the present building. and ten beds for women students which, added to the eight beds now available on the first floor, will increase to eighteen the num ber of beds for women. A sun • ••••••:,•,,,,.....;?:,,,,,,...• ' • Vii.A!”r:'..* . ..• . : ,, : .. i .t:.....,..., ,:e.:;::::6:si::::::::'.ii ."., .• ~ '.. , ,•:'`iv,::::•:: . • . l , ibs,ige rl:%•::;:i:•'..z., avo t mololog i N tiVo:izipm•:ON:ool4,4 . !. &,.:::igy e t : N4:4,o4 M adattikeitka., • w;:,...4 • . NV zinger Physics'Ta I ks Scheduled Here Noted scientists from all parts of the world will , gather at the College July 24 to 27 for the, second Conference on lono sphere Physics. The program is sponsored by the School of En gineering ^.t the College and the Geophysical Research Director ate of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories. Among the scientists on the program are men from India, Norway, Germany, Belgium, England, Canada, and Australia. All papers will be technical, (Continued on Page Fourten) porch to the north of the east. wing will be provided • for wo men students. Second floor of the east wing will provide beds for eighteen men increasing the total number to 38. A sun porch will be added to the north end of the wing and 'the present sun porch to the west of the original structure also will be reserved for men students. Numerous alterations will be made in the basement of the old building, which will • include a central sterilization area, space fqr storage of inactive records, locker room facilities for nurses, and space for physical plant fa cilities. Storage Space In . the past wing basement will be located the . kitchen with re frigeration and storage space while the west wing basement will contain rooms, for physical therapy and x-ray equipment, a fracture room, a clinical lab oratory with waiting rooms, and pharmacy storage. • • E. College Ave. TI-It $lJl4ll4p COLLEGIAN, STATE COLtEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Louis H. Bell New Member ACPRA Louis H. Bell, director of public information at the Col lege, is a new member of the executive board of the Ameri can College Public Relation Association and editor of its newsletter. This was announced today by Stewart F. Harrel, ACPRA. presi dent, following the annual meet ing at the University of Michi gan, June 27-30. At the meeting, the College won a citation for the nation's best public relations project at tempted through the press "judged from the college public relations viewpoint." Scholarship Plan The winning project was a plan through which the College and 15 daily Pennsylvania newspapers cooperated to select outstanding teachers and to provide them with all-expense scholarships for the Main Summer Session. The plan was developed by the Public In formation Department in coop eration with the School of Edu cation. The College became the confer ence's only dotible winner of awards when its photographic entry was selected second 10st. The winning picture was taken by Edward H. Leos, photographer in Central Extension. It was a pic ture of Francis H, Tolan in cap and gown holding his twin daugh ters, symbolizing the twin com mencement exercises at the Col lege. Poultry Group Ends Contest The Chicken of TomorroW con test wound up on June 20, with the selling of the dressed car casses at auction in Coatesville. The broiler growing contest be- 1 gan in Pennsylvania during the week of March 23 to 29. Chicks born during this period I.veie en tered in the event which ended with the dressing of the birds at the Producers' Cooperative Ex change at Coatesville on June 15. The event was sponsored in Pennsylvania by the Pennsyl vania State Poultry Federation in cooperation with many oth-r allied educational and commer cial groups. 4 total of 19,400 broilers .-were submitted in the 239 entries. The competing grow ers represented 24 different coun ties in the junior class; 20 coun ties in .the senior class; and .12 counties in the regional diVision. The regional . division group was composed of poultry growers who are known as key breeders. !ME= Trustees Approve New Student Union The College Board of Trustees approved on June 10 the construction of a Student Union building and it is expecied that the structure will be under contract by late fall. .The Trustees also approved the assessment of a studea fee to assist in financing the building. The assessment was passed by 401 -College Cabinet on May 25. The fee will =want to $7.50 per semester next year and the following year will be increased to $lO per semester. The Joint Trustee-Alumni Committee had approved pre liminary plans for the building and recommend their acceptance to the Trustees prior to the Board action. Pollock Site A site on Pollock road, south of Osmond Laboratory, was set by the Board as the location for the structure. The entrance will be from Pollock road, and ter races commanding views of Hol mes field and of Mount Nittany Noted Pastor To Present First Lecture Dr. John Paul Jones, pastor of the Federated Church, ,Dowagiac, Mich., will present the first of the series of lectures to be sponsored at the College this summer by the 111th annual Pennsylvania Workshop. Using the topic, "Knowing Your Neighbors," Dr. Jones will speak at 11 a.m. Friday in. Room 3, Carnegie Hall. Mary .rane Wy land, professor of education and co-ordinator for the Workshop, pointed out that the lecture by Dr. Jones, as well as .other lec tures of the series, will be open to the public as well as to stu dents of the Workshop. Dr. Jones, who was graduated from Olivet College, and later received his master's degree in educational administration at the University of Michigan, began his career in public education as a history teacher and debate coach. He later became adminis trative head of Flint Junior Col lege, Flint, Mich. and in 1928 established a junior college at Jackson, Mich., which for four years he served as dean. 13 Years At Indiana In 1932, Dr. Jones entered the ministry—a field in which he had long been interested. He obtained 'a student -pastorate in a small town community church near Chicago while attending the Di vinity School and Chicago Theo logical Seminary. In 1935 Dr. Jones was called to the pastorate of Ply mouth Congregational Church in Whit in g, Indiana, where he remained nearly 13 years. YOU RECOGNIZE HE PICTURE? WHITE AND PINK . . . A-B-C CUPS DANKS & Co. will be south of the building. Following the approval al lira preliminary plans, the College architect was instructed by the Board to complete the detailed plans and submit them tor final approval to the Executive Coin mittee of the Board. The Trustees also heard rue. liminary plans for the construe• tion of a Field House on the can). pus. The investigating committee was instructed to continue its study and present plans and tuti. mates of cost at a future me It is expected the committee! present the next report to the Joint Trustee-Alumni Committee in the fall. Our Leading Manufacturer of FINE BRAS Has Given Us a Quantity of Regular 2.50 Bras To Offer 'for. a SPECIAL SALE 1.75 32 to 38 State College Bellefonte rAmc wmtkerr 2 for 3.39
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers