r , r.: 4 • 4, Ttittrgtatt • Section Pages 4 ancls Eisenhower On: Five-Day, Statewide Tour Will Visit All Trustees, Industrial, Farm Areas Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, new College president, left Sunday on a five-day statewide tour in order to meet the College's 32 trustees personally. At the same time, he will have a chance to fulfill his previously-expressed desire of learning more about Pennsyl vania's vast industrial and agri cultural resources. Lyman E. Jackson, dean of the School of Agriculture, and three presidential assistants are accom .panying the President on the auto mobile tour that will continue through Friday. C. L. Kinsloe, of State College, will join three ,other trustees from nearby com munities in the final session to be held here on campus Friday: First Stop Pittsburgh was Dr. Eisen hower's first stop. He met there yesterday with James Milholland, president, and seven other mem bers of the Board of Trustees. At the conference table with Eisen hower and Milholland were J. A. Boak and Roger W. Rowland, New Castle; J. L. Mauthe, Youngs town, Ohio; G. H. Young, George Deike, J. N. Forker, and Walter W. Patchell, Pittsburgh. Today, Dr., Eisenhower and his group are scheduled to be in Harrisburg. Gov. James H. Duff is expected to join the conferees at lunch. Others who will join the President in a tour of the Harris burg Center are Miles Horst and W. Stewart Taylor, Harrisburg; D. Norris Benedict, Waynesboro; John H. Light, Annville; and R. Johnston Gillen, Saint Thomas. Tour New Center The party will meet in Phila delphia tomorrow, where a tour of the newly-acquired Ogontz Center is planned after lunch. With the president at lunch and later on the tour will be Milton Fritche and W. D. Harkins, Phila delphia; James B. Long, Blue Bell; Furman H. Gyger, Kimber ton; and H. Thomas Hallowell, Jr, Rydel. • •At Hazleton Thursday, the President wily be joined by (Continued oiz page eight) Labor Leaders Begin Institute • Pennsylvania labor leaders, for the fifth straight year, are on campus for the annual Steel Workers' Institute. Approximat ely 75 _of the more than 450 local labor 'officials and committeemen who are expected to attend one of the, four .week-long sessions, ar rived punday, July 9, to begin the first .program. New groups will arrive each' Sunday for the next three weeks. Each institute will be broken up, into three groups, according to A.' S. Luchek, associate professor of economics- in • extension and chairman of the institute. A basic survey course in "Union and La bor Responsibility" is offered for those who are here for the first time. The advanced group will have the, choice of one of two courses, Theywill specialize . either in "Health, Wealth, and Safety in Collective Bargaining and Legis lation"; or in "Union Leadership Training." The institute was founded here in 1946 by the Extension Services of the College and the United Steelworkers of America, affili ate of the C. 1.0. Since then, the idea has spread to 11 other colleges and universities through out -the nation. While on campus, the steel workers will be housed in the various fraternity houses. Round Dance Set For Friday in TUB The first round dance of the Main Summer Session, to be held in the TUB from 9 to 12 p. m. Fri day, July 14, will feature music by The Dukes. Admission will be 50 cents per person. The dance is informal, and stu dents may come stag or in coup les. Tickets will be sold in the TUB the night of the dance. C. M. "Dutch" Sykes of the College's in tramural department charge of arrangements-for the dance. 'Gypsies' Give Concert Tonight The Gypsies . . . . THE. GYPSY TROUPE which will open the 1950 Summer Artists Series Tonight DuMont To Give Address At Radio-Video Institute . Allen B. DuMont, president of. DuMont LaboratorieS and a pioneer in the field of television, will be the main speaker at the 3rd. annual Radio and Tele:vision Institute which opens tomoffow. • Four htmdred.radiomen and educators interested in preparing Men and women for careers in radio and ,television are expected to be on hand for registration beginning at 9 p.m. in 10, Sparks. The event sponsored by the department of speech, will continue through Thursday.: "Television's Tomorrow" will be DuMont's topic when -he speaks at the opening lecture-forum slated for 10 a.m., tomorrow. Robert T. Oliver, professor .of speech, will preside at the session. Lecture-Forum Don W. Lyon, TV program directcir at . Syracuse University will lead the lecture-forum scheduled for 1:30 p.m. His topic will be "The College Builds a Television Studio." He will be introduced by • Holle G. Deßoer, assistant professor of speech. At 3 p.m. a symposium on the subject "What Kind of Help Does Commercial Radio Need From Schools and Colleges in The Way of Personnel and Programs?" is scheduled, Joseph F. O'Brien, pro fessor of public speaking, pre siding. The panel will include prominent radiomen and edu cators. A lecture-forum, "The Campus Limited Radio Station"' will open Thursday's progr a m. John Roberts, director of the Temple University Radio Workshop will be the speaker at the meeting scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. Pre siding will be Clayton H. Schug, associate professor of public speaking. Ag TV At 10:30 a.m., "Radio and Tele vision in Agriculture" will be the topic of Joe Tonkin; extension radio specialist, Division of Ex tension Information, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. Elton B. Tait, assistant professor of agricultural extension will preside. A lecture forum, "Suggestions for Producing Educational Television," is scheduled to wind up the two day institute. Beginning at 1:30 p.m., the discussion will be led by George Anderson, Millersville State Teacher's College. A. W. (Continued on page eight) inside Features Page 2 .... Page 3 .... . Late News Page 3 Ag Hill Page 4 Dutch Sykes Page 4 Record Softball Page 5 - Pa. Workshop Page 8 . Unwanted Diplomas Page 5 All-Star Game PPB 4I 7.:.:. Pa. .... Workshop STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1950 Outdoor Movie To Be Shown "Angel On My Shoulder" is the full-length movie to be shown on the front campus at the Pugh street gate tomorrow night at 9 p. m. The picture stars Paul Muni, Anne Baxter, and Claude Rains. One . of the most popular weekly features of the Recreation Office, the movies are scheduled to be shown each Wednesday night for the remainder of the Main Sum mer Session. In case of rain, the films will be shown in Schwab auditorium. No charge is made for these movies, and film titles will be an nounced weekly. Domitory Set-up Announced; 1,300 To Live On Campus Between 950 and 1,000 women will be housed in the women's dormitories during the Main Summer Session, according to Cor delia L. Hibbs, assistant to the Dean of Women in charge of housing. Graduate students and teachers will be housed in Simmons Hall. McElwain Hall will houSe undergraduates, graduate students, and teachers. Grange Dormttory will be used by undergraduates Fun Night Set, • For Saturday An evening , of fun has been scheduled for Saturday, July 15. All summer sessions . students are invited to attend the informal affair called "Fun Night" to be held at Rec Hall this Saturday beginning at 8 p.m. C. M. "Dutch" Sykes, director of summer recreation, has an nounced that Fun Night will be an evening of sports and games to suit everyone. Volleyball, badminton, an d ping-pong are on tap for the more athletic minded. There will also be cards and tables avail able, records for dancing, and other features. Editorial Blue. jeans will be in style for guys and gals alike and it is hoped; that all will take part in an evening of fun. A :similar.,`, affair 'is scheduled for Saturday, July 29.' Troupe To Raise Curtain On Summer Artists Series "The Gypsies," a musical troupe, will open the 1950 Summer Artists Series in Schwab auditorium at 8:30 tonight. .This will be the first of four concerts to be presented during the Main Summer Session in connection with the Series. Tickets for this program 'will go on sale at the Student Union desk in Old Main at 7:30 tonight. The price will be $1.20. The colorful gypsy group, whose brand of entertainment has Large Crowd Attends Affair In White Hall A capacity crowd including President and Mrs. Eisenhower jammed White Hall Friday night for the annual Summer Recep tion, the first social affair of the Main Summer Session. The crowd, estimated between 2,500 and 3,000, danced to the music of Don Peebles and his orchestra. There was a game room and refreshments were served. The receiving line in clu d e d Marion R. Trabue, dean of the School of Education and director of Summer Sessions, and his wife; Palmer C. Weaver, assistant dean of the School of Education and assistant director of Summer Sessions, and his wife; Frank D. Kern, dean of the Gr adu at e School, and his wife; and Pearl 0. Weston, dean of women. The same committee which planned last year's reception were in charge of this year's successful affair. Marie • Haidt, director of :women's physical education, was chairman. Others on the committee were Christine Salmon, assistant pro fessor of housing and home art, and Edward Matti', assistant pro fessor of art education, in charge of decorations; Ann Free, assistant professor of foods and nutrition, and Ella Mae Jackson, assistant to the dean of women, in charge of the hostesses; Edith Johnson, superiisor •of dining halls for women, in charge of refresh ments; and Clarence Sykes, in structor in physical education, in charge of recreation. To Serve Meals who will be on campus for the entire, summer. Women participating in the School of Education's Pennsyl vania Workshop will live in Women's Building. Work shop classes will be held on the first floor of that building. Married couples will• occupy Mac Allister Hall, and the various campus cot tages which have been vacant since February will house mar ried couples with families. Meals will be served in Sim mons and McElwain Halls only. Women living in Grange will eat in either Simmons or McElwain. Women on campus during the summer will be subject to the same rules which apply to sen ior women during the winter ses sions. They will have 11 o'clock permiSsions from Sunday to Thursday. Fridays and Satur days, they will receive one o'clock permissions. Pollock Dormitories will be open to male students who will be on campus for the six-week session. About 300 men are ex pected to live in the Pollock area, according to Daniel A. DeMar inp, assistant dean of men. been hailed by many critics as outstanding in American show business, will present a two-hour show filled with comedy, songs, and traditional gypsy airs. The production features dark-tressed Annabelle Escoe, lyric soprano and violinist who has played in productions throughout Europe and the Far East. Rounded Progiam Also featured on the program will be Lila, singer, and Peggy 't3eorge, pianist. Under the direc tion of Herbert Bagwell, violinist and authority on authentic gypsy music and folklore, the musical selections will range from airs played by the gypsy bands in Europe to South American rhy thms, American hit songs,, and the classics. The first part of the program will include "Der. Sohn der Haide," Keler Bela; "Vlacha," Greek gypsy song; "Assony less A Lanybol," Hungarian gypsy song; "Golden Earrings," Victor Young; "Hora Staccato," Dinicu; "Gypsy Serenade," traditional; and "Ste (Continued on page eight) Physics Dept. Plans Affair The second annual Physics Open House sponsored by the College physics department will be held in Osmond Laboratory from 7 to. 10 tomorrow night. The open house is planned especially for science teachers but is open to the public, according to Fred Tracy, instructor of physics in charge of the affair. The research laboratories . will be open for inspection, and a variety of demonstration equip ment will be in operation. • The program will feature the more interesting and spectacular as pects of research and instruction. Ultrasonic Siren on Display The acoustic laboratory's ultra sonic siren will be on display-) This powerful siren generatek, sound waves which will ignite irke flammable materials, boil waters and enable marbles to float inP mid-air. The siren, which is useful; in basic physical research, is now' employed in studies of the biolo gical effect of sound waves. At high intensity, these waves •may be sufficient to kill insects 'and small animals after brief ex posure: X-Rac, the electronic brain de veloped for rapid handling of the calculations involved in crystal structure analysis, will also be on display. This computer, which was recently installed by the Col lege, will solve in a few minutes complicated problems formerly requiring months for solution. Rearch Projects To Be Shown Other research projects on disw play will include a study of brain waves, computation of bone dens sity of living specimens from x ray studies, radioaCtivity, and the electron microscope, Several lab oratories will operate exhibits of specially designed large-scale de monstration equipment built by the physics department for de monstration lecture purposes and used in the Auto Lab which toured Pennsylvania towns sever al years ago. The open house was instituted as an experiment last summer and was such a success that it is now an annual affair. This year's open house will be followed by a series of popular scientific lectures on Wednesday evenings.
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