PAGE TWO $7,000 In Scholarships Slated For Ag Students Annual scholarship's valued at more than $7,000 will be awarded to students in the School of Agriculture at the Ag hill party to be held in Recreation hall this Saturday. More than 2,000 agriculture students are expected to attend the party, which also will include a buffet supper, a student-faculty mix er, entertainment, square and round dancing, and informal speeches. Tickets at $1 per person are on sale at Student Union and from all departments and members of clubs within the school. The deadline -for purchase of tickets will be to morrow at 5 p.m. Representatives of the compan ies which are donating scholar ships will present the awards per sonally. The Borden company, the Kroger company, Pennsylvania Power and Light company, and Sears Roebuck' and company are among those awarding the schol arships. Charles Zellner, a senior in poultry husbandry, and P. H. Mar golf, a member of the poultry husbandry staff and adviser to the Agriculture student council, are general co-chairmen of a large group of student-faculty commit tees planning the party. The tick et committee has James Pasike as its student chairman and E. A. Mintmier, of the Agriculture Ex tension service, as its faculty chairman. Samuel I. Auker, ad ministrative assistant to Dean Ly man Jackson, is in charge of fi nances. Record 16,000 See Hort Show Setting a new all-time record, a total of 16,161 persons, by ac tual count, visited the 1950 Hert show, an annual feature of alumni homecoming weekend. This year's show, with Domen ick Palumbo, Jr., of Mt. Lebanon and Thomas Rickert of Pittsburgh, as managers, was dedicated to Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, who visi ted the show on Saturday evening. Last year nearly 10,000 persons, almost the same number as turned out on Sunday this year, inspected the exhibits. The show had a theme emphasizing how a backyard should look. In this manner each of the four divisions, ornamental, flowers, vegetables and fruits, received special at tention, and living plants were used for the displays. Ten-Week Dance Class Planned By West Dorms • Plans for a ten-week program of dance instruction were formu lated at an organizational meet ing of the West dorms dancing class. Over 200 residents of the area attended the meeting. The group will be broken into smaller units which will meet in the TUB every week, Monday through Friday, from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Both male and female in struction will be used. Paul Kritsky and Frank Hutt linger, resident advisers in Hamil ton hall, are in charge of the classes. Kritsky said classes would begin as soon as records of the members had been compiled. He said men who had signed up for the instruction would be noti fied of the starting date by post card. STARLITE DRIVE-IN on BELLEFONTE ROAD Shows 7 and 9 P.M. Tuesday and Wednesday "THE LOST PATROL" BORIS KARLOFF VIC McLAGLAN --plus•— "Sixteen Fathoms Deep" LON CHANET ARTHUR LAKE Also Selected Short Subjects THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANNIA. College Group Makes UN Visit Twenty-eight students and fac ulty members visited the United Nations last week on the tour ar ranged by the Christian Heritage commission of the Penn State Christian association. On this four-day tour, the group saw various UN committees in action and interviewed Dr. Ralph Bunche, of the United States del egation. Students On Tour Students who went on the tour were: Joanna Bucknell, Judith Eckert, Jo Ann Esterly, Marge Evans, Bernice Hicks, Helena Jen sen, Janet Lubowitz, Joan Hirsh, Sandra Marks, Betty McGee, Sue Newhauser, Lou Owen, Irene Sloat, Louise Woods, Marilyn Yingst. Also, Joseph Banks, Charles Eckert, R. C. Edstrom, William Greenham, George Greet; Mat thew Halchin, Albert Kalson, Cal vin Sammons and Reed Smith. Marjorie Allen, Lenore Staats, and Luther Harshbarger of the PSCA and Dr. Kent Forster of the history department went along as advisers of the group. Bunch Interview In their interview Tuesday with Dr. Ralph Bunche, Nobel peace prize winner, the students asked questions about current UN proceedings which they had not understood while watching the committees. When asked how he felt about the idea of UN troops' going beyond the 38th parallel in Korea, he replied that planes al ready had gone beyond the line to bomb supply centers, so the UN could take no other action. The group also met Mr. William Such, New Zealand delegate who works with the international chil dren's fund committee. When they asked the Indian delegate, Chak rovarty, how he felt about the position the United States is tak ing in world affairs, he said that he believed this country was wrong in not recognizing the pre sent Communist government in China. Tuesday afternoon the group at tended the New York Herald Tri bune forum "The Untapped Po tentials in Labor-Management Re lations." Public Instruction Margaret C. Raabe, assistant professor of clinical speech, rep resented the College last week at meetings with the state Depart ment of Public Instruction in Har risburg. Proposed revisions of laws governing the education of acoustically handicapped were discussed. NOW! At Your I Warner Theatre Cad aunt FRANCHOT TONE IN "JIG SAW" 'Eats MARION BRANDO TERESA WRIGHT "THE MEN" Beta Sigma Rho Wins Fraternity Lawn Contest Beta Sigma Rho with its "Prize Package of the New Year" won the homecoming weekend frater nity lawn display contest. Phi Kappa Sigma and Alpha Tau Omega, winner for the past two years, copped second and third place. respectively. The three 'judges, David Stone of Ethel Meserves, Mrs. Beth K. Wham of the home art depart ment, and Philip F. Hallock of the architecture department said the judging was particularly tough this year because of the large number of fine displays. Beta Sigma Rho's display cop ped first prize with a large lion dressed as a clown with its light ed eyes blinking off and on. Be side the lion was a large box with a red ribbon around it. Inside the half-opened box were figures of President Eisenhower and Rip Engle. In front of the display was a big sign reading, "The Prize Package of the Year." Phi Kappa Sigma took second place with its life-like stork carry.- ing President Eisenhower and Erlgle, symbolizing the ushering in of the New Era. Alpha Tau Omega took third place with the display of a huge football kicking at a whisky bot tle, depicting the removal of drinking from the campus. Meeting To Hear Ag Club Members Members of the Clover club will speak before , some of the nation's outstanding scientists at the national annual meeting of the American Society of Agron omy in Cincinnati, this week. . Lewis Mayhe, an agronomy ma jor, will talk on program plan ning. Eighteen gradUate students and faculty members are attend ing the meetings, and technical papers growing out of studies on crops and soils made Imre will be presented by them. Dr. H. R. Albrecht, heady of the Agronomy department, Pennsyl vania's representative and mem ber of the advisory council of the association, will discuss prelimi nary arrangements for next year's convention, which will be held at the College from Aug. 25 to 31. Dr. Joseph Steckel is the club's faculty adviser and also is on the student activities committee of the association. PSCA Begins Dance Instruction Tonight The Penn. State Christian asso ciation will begin a series of folk and square dancing lessons to night at 7 o'clock in 100 Horti culture. Bert Kessel will be in charge. LATE AP NEWS COURTESY WMAJ- N. Koreans Offer Strong Resistance NORTH KOREA North Koreans still on the counter-offensive offered strong resistance in several northwest Korean sectors and advanced to within 30 miles of Hamhung. Americari reinforcements raced to within approximately 50 miles of Hamhung on the south and 75 miles on the north in an attempt to bolster South Korean Chest— (Continued from page one) en, Mary Ann Krepps, Joan Dav ies, Ann Jones, Phyllis Eaton, Barbara Bright, Clarice Llinch, and Janet Sanders. ATHERTON, HALL—Catherine Corbiere, Lois Ruth, Ginia Mac- Millan, Donna Esterbrook, and Jane Ifft. Home Management—Pat Porn eroy. CO-OP HOUSEL—Susanne Hos ler. WOMEN'S BUlLDlNG—Vir ginia Bowman, Jane Yahres, Jean Wiprough, Janet Carstenson, Bar bara Sprenkle. MC ALLISTER H A L L—Eliza beth Stuter, Jane McCool, Lois Lehman, Suzanne Todd, Nancy Acheson, Billie Groe, Ruth Dor sey, Lix Newell, Shirley Pritch ard, Corinne Janssens and Jean Patterson. Plane Crash-- (Continued from page one) Rugged and treacherous moun tain terrain stretching for. 80 miles from Johnstown to Statg. College made it necessary for the searchers to cover the. area tour times before the wreckage was discovered. A heavy fall of leaves and a thick underbrush co' led together to make the task more difficult. • Location of the wreckage was made by William H. Weaver. a Civil 'Air Patrol Member' florn Jerome. While flying at 2,000 feet he sighted the tail section of a plane sticking out from the un derbrush about three-fourths of .a mile off route 56 near the com munity of Rummel. He saw no signs of life. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1950 troops. Meanwhile, the British 27th Brigade captured Chongju, im portant North Korean coastal road and rail junction situated about 50 miles from the Manchur ian border. Chongju was cap tured after bitter street fighting which raged block by block. Reds Still Oppose Lie • LAKE SUCCESS—The Rus sians yesterday continued to op pose the extension of Trygve Lie's term as UN secretary-gen eral charging the Norwegian dip lomat with being two-faced, un objective, and ' an "echoer of American policies." Meanwhile the UN assembly's political com mittee rejected a Soviet resolution which called for the General As sembly to condemn propaganda in favor of a new war and de manded the prohibition of the use of atomic weapons. Island Revolt Kills 23 SAN JUAN—Luis IVlunoi Mar in, governor of Puerto Rico, said Communist influence was behind yesterday's outbreak on the is land. Anti-United States Nation alist rebels fired on the governor's palace and other places in Puerto Rico, killing 23 persons and wounding an undisclosed number of others. Delay Arms Agreement WASHINGTON—The Atlantic Pact Defense committee appar ently failed to agree on the Ger man rearmament question and issued no communique on the dis cussions held yesterday. 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