The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 20, 1951, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
Masons To Hear
Blue Band Play
The Concert Blue band of the
Colege will present a concert at
the regular meeting of the Wil
liamsport Consistory of the Free
Masons on Thursday night, James
W. Dunlop, assistant professor of
music education and Blue band
conductor, announced.
The concert will feature a cor
onet trio presentation by soloists
John Leister, Eugene Golla, and
James Colonna.
Before the concert, Dunlop and
the band will be the guests of the
consistory at a banquet in the
consistory banquet room.
The concert arrangements were
made by Dunlop through 0. W.
Houts, State College businessman
active in the Masonic Or de r.
Transportation for the band mem
bers is being furnished by the
Masons. Houts will furnish trans
portation for the band's musical
instruments.
IFC Reports No
Hell Week Action
The Interfraternity council
board of control has met once but
has taken no definite action on
the hell week problem, IFC
President Harold Leinbach said
yesterday.
Leinbach said the subject was
discussed at the meeting but that
no penalty had been set up. He
said the board would meet this
week and will take recommenda
tions for penalties to the council
at their meeting Feb. 28.
The board of control was given
authorization Wednesday night
by IFC to regulate hell week ac
tivities on campus and to recom
mend penalties for offending
fraternities.
Belles Lettres Club
Will Meet Tonight
Belles Lettres club will hold its
first meeting of the new semes
ter tonight at 7 o'clock in the
north-east lounge of Atherton
hall.
Gordon Smith, instructor of
English composition at the Col
lege, will discuss "The Art of
Book Binding." Mr. Smith will
bring examples of his own work
in this field and will demonstrate
how books can be bound artistic
ally. The meeting is open to the
public.
Coutu Speaks Tonight
Dr. Walter Coutu, professor of
sociology at the College, will
speak to the Psychology club to
night at 7:30 in 204 Burrows.
Dr. Coutu. will read an original
paper entitled "Role-taking Ver
sus Role-playing." It will present
a sociological and psychological
approach.
State Party To Meet
The State party will hold pre
liminary nominations for clique
officers in 10 Sparks at 7 p.m.
,Sunday, Harry Cover, clique
chairman, announced yesterday.
Cover said persons interested in
allphases of political work should
attend. He said voting will be
limited to persons wh o attend
two party meetings.
YOUR OFFICIAL
CLASS RING
Class of 52
Your Class IS 's2'
Order Now
Balfour's or 'A' Store
IT'S
WINK'S
SKY-VIEW
For The Best In—
Barbecues
Sea Foods
Steaks and Chops
Chicken in the Basket
'on Route 322
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Grad School
(Continued from page one)
Dean Wilson, but he was in con
ference and could not be reached.
It seems to me the move shows
appointive power."
DeMarino said that cabinet
would decide such matters "in the
future" but that, in the event
that a graduate student is tried in,
the immediate future, he should
be represented on Tribunal. He
also said that in the past graduate
students who violated regulations
were dealt with in the dean of
men's office, but this time the
Campus patrol referred the viola
tor to Tribunal.
See said that if graduate stu
dents who violated traffic laws
were supposed to be reported to
the dean's office instead of to
Tribunal, `they have made mis
takes for years." He said such
cases often have come before Tri
bunal but that no protests' were
made by the violators.
Home Ec Club
Elects Officers
Officers chosen at a meeting of
the Home Economics club last
week were: Betty Anders, presi
dent; Eleanor Morisuye, vice
president; Nancy Ferguson, sec
retary; and Ann Walker, treasur
er.
Elected to the club's council
were Eleanor Chanko and Jane
Strawn, junior class representa
tives; Constance Matlavage and
Lee Coy, sophomore class repre- 1
sentatives; and JoAnne Wilson
and Rachel Williams, freshman
class representatives.
Thirty-nine girls were recently
initiated into the club.
Every morning from 9 to 11
o'clock the Home Economics club
holds a coffee hour in the living
center.
Fellowship Goes
To Former Student
Ernest S. Dix, assistant profes
sor in geography at Miami uni
versity, Oxford, 0., was one of
three to be awarded the Austin
S. Garver fellowship.
Dix was graduated by Penn
State in 1941. He received a bach
elor of science degree.
The fellowship is part of a fund
left by Austin S. Garver who was
a minister of the First Unitarian
church. It was divided among
Clark university for fellowships,
Worcester polytechnic institute
for scholarships, and the Worces
ter art museum.
Dix will study at Clark uni
versity, Worcester, Mass.
lES -To Hear Lecture
A lecture on student teaching
will be given tonight at a meet
ing of the Industrial Education
society in 111 Carnegie hall at
3 o'clock.
The lecture will be given by vo
cational education and industrial
arts students who were practice
teaching last semester.
Historic Inn Built in 1824
Is Still Making History As A Most Popular Eating Place
THE EUTAW HOUSE
8 TYPES OF STEAKS * SEAFOODS
SUNDAY DINNERS SERVED 12:00 to 7:30
DINNER PARTIES and BANQUETS for
GROUPS UP TO 120
Dial Centre Hall 48-R-3
Located In Potters Mills
At The Intersection Of Routes 322 and 53
Ad Fraternity
Plans Field Trip
A field trip to Philadelphia is
planned for March 27-29 by Al
pha Delta Sigma, national ad
vertising fraternity.
Visits scheduled include the
Philadelphia Bulletin plant, Curtis
publishing company, N. W. Ayer
advertising agency, a lithographic
plant, and WCAIJ
. radio and tele
vision stations.
The fraternity .also planned for
a smoker March 11. Frederick M.
Lowe, promotion manager of Nor
folk Newspapers, incorporated,
will speak at the smoker. His talk
will include the organizational
and administrative ends of tele
vision stations.
Part of the smoker will be a
business meeting.
Garbar, Lab Head,
Talks To Clover Club
Dr. R. J. Garber, head of the
United States Regional Pasture
laboratory, will speak on the ac
tivities of the laboratory here at
Penn State at the regular meet
ing of the Clover club tonight at
7:15 in 11 Plant Industries build
ing.
A business meeting will be held
and a motion picture accompany
ing the talk will be shown.
Discussion will take place on an
essay contest on any subject in
agronomy sponsored by th e
American Society of Agronomy.
The first three awards are medals
and cash prizes.
Am. Forestry Society
Elects New Chairman
Maurice K. Goddard, profepor
of forestry and director of the
Mount Alto branch of the Col
lege, was elected chairman of the
Allegheny section of the Society
of American Forestors at the sec
tion's three-day mid-winter con
vention held last week-end in
Baltimore.
Goddard succeeds J. Ira Kolb of
Elmer, N.J. as chairman. The
Allegheny section includes Mary
land, Delaware, West Virginia,
New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
Rail Strike Delays
Old Main Art Exhibit
The Metropolitan art exhibit,
scheduled to be held in Old Main
in connection with Religion-in-
Life week, has been delayed in
definitely due to the recent rail
strike, Ralph Cash, chairman of
the religious culture committee,
said yesterday.
"The ceremonial objects exhib
it has been creating furor in the
library lobby," Cash said. He
urged students to visit the exhibit
this week.
FRATERNITY
NEWSPAPERS
All Kinds of Printing
CommercialPrinfing Inc.
Glennland Bldg., State College
Eisenhower Speech
(Continued from page one)
division between a system 'predi
cated on the emphatic rejection of
God' and a way of life which had
its origins and has. gained much
of its strength from the spiritual
values of religion—from religion
which has been defined in its
widest sense as the union of man
with God.
"It is well that everyone should
comprehend th e fundamental
cleavage which divides much of
the world's population into op
posing camps: the cleavage is on
the issue of belief in God.
"Communism, rejecting God .. .
makes man completely subserv
ient to the state, and to a despotic
state at that. Democracy . . . is
based on the intrinsic worth and
the innate dignity of the individ
ual as a creature of God, and
therefore makes man inviolable
in his basal human rights," he
said.
"This was the point of division,"
the President continued, "for the
extremely materialistic philoso-
CLASS
FOR RENT
WANTED BOY to share comfortable
warm double room near campus. Single
poster beds. 230 S. Frazier. Phone 2965.
TRAILER AT Woodsdale Park. Phone
6595. Ask for Howe or Webster.
TRAILER LOTS are now available at
Woodsdale Park. Phone 6595.
FOR RENT: Large single room in faculty
home North side, ground floor, private
entrance, new bed, 2 large closets, use
of automatic Bendix, limited kitchen privi
leges. share bath with one other male
student. $lO per week. Harby, 315 W. Hill
crest, State College 6822.
LARGE FRONT room with twin beds
Handy to campus. 6443.
MISCELLANEOUS
IF YOUR typewriter needs repairs just
call 2492 or bring machine to 633 W
College Ave. Mr. Beattie. 23 years ex
perience is at your service.
TYPING AND Mimeographing. Letters,
manuscripts, theses, term papers, etc.
Hotel State College. Room 205. Secretarial
Service. Phone 4906. Helen G. Yarnell.
TYPEWRITER REPAIRING. All work
guaranteed. Will call for and deliver.
Phone Paul E. Henninger, State College
7842.
BOARD FOR men students on five or six
day basis.. Reasonable rates. Telephone
3892.
HAND KNIT your own baby gifts using
soft-colored yarns from Margaret's Shop
on. S. Frazier Street.
BIRTHDAY CAKES, excellent fruitpunch,
all kinds of party refreshments. Frida
Stern. 122 Irvin Ave., State College.
LOST
LOST BROWN wallet in West Dorm
vicinity. Owner needs cards. Call Harry
Whitesell, 11:16 Watts Hall. Reward.
Z.B.T. Fraternity pin. Probably around
Sparks. Please call Joel 6718.
YOUNG MEN'S SHOP
young men's sho
127 s. al le n eau
one man
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1951
phies on which the modern Com
munist idea is based interpreted
all human phenomena in terms of
purely physical or materialistic
causes and rejected any belief in
the supernatural, while the great
Christian tradition continued to
grow and develop . . ."
Concluding his address, the
President said, "Of this we may
be sure: In the perspective of fu
ture history, the strategic victory
—the lasting triumph of this per
iod—will certainly be seen to
have been won by the side with
the greater moral and spiritual
strength.
"If you and I attain the gen
uine understanding of ourselves
and of the cardinal principles of
our free society, we will, I know,
be better prepared to develop
essential understanding of other
peoples, cultures and nations.
Then, and only then, shall we
be prepared to accept our share
of citizen-responsibilty for build
ing a total program for perman
ent peace."
FIEDS
BLACK LEATHER purse in vicinity of
Willard Hall or Creamery Sat. %Con
tains wallet and glasses. Finder 'may
keep money. Return to Student Union.
BLACK AND Gold Schaefer pencil with
the inscriptioll B.S.H. 5-31-49 in gold.
Call Barb at 51 Atherton. Reward.
LOST—K&E Log-Log Slide rule No
632048. Reward for return. Phone 7611
PERSON WHO picked up grayish-brown
overcoat last Wednesday in Willard, call
4409. I have your coat.
RAINCOAT TAKEN by mistake in Will
ard, Wednesday. I have yours. Call 10,97
Ask for Edward Thomas.
GRADUATE NURSE to manage nursing
home near State College. Living quarters
provided for man and wife. Phone 3764.
TYPING? FOR fast service and low rates
on term papers, theses, etc. Just call
6324. 330-B Windcrest.
ASCRIBANTS TO Escapism. Don't re
press. Catharsis to the Storyville Sextet.
Paradise Cafe. Wed. Nite.
HOUSE-MOTHER for a• cottage of 15
girls—ages 15 to 18. Children's home in
Eastern Pennsylvania; beautiful living
quarters. Good salary including ,complete
maintenance. Start June or July. Contact
Rev. A. S. Asendorf, 329 S. Burrowes St.,
Phone 3178.
FOR SALE
1997 LIBERTY 23'. Housetrailer. Good
condition. Special price. Completely
furnished. Call 3505, Joseph Pasmanelli,
Hoover's Trailer Park.
19 FOOT Housetrailer with porch, 340-B
Windcrest.
19 FOOT Royal Coach Housetrailer with
Porch. Sleeps four. 390-B Windcrest.
GIRL'S FIGURE skates, Size B—brand
new. Call 7438. Owner leaving for Texas.
OLDS STANDARD Trumpet gold laquer
(with silver trim at 419 W. Foster Ave.
after 6 p.m. Ask fin. May.
PRESENTS
doe FAIRP tRT
By CAMPUS TOGS
45 2 °
The Student Choice at
Princeton University
WORSTED FLANNEL
3-BUTTON MODEL
VENTED BACK
WANTED