PACE TWO iegand To Head Physical Plant Dept. Walter H. Wiegand, supervisor of plant extension, has been named director of the Depart ment of Physical Plant, President Milton S. Eisenhower announced yesterdi'y. Wiegand will succeed George W. Ebert, wh o retired Feb. 1 after 23 years of service. The Waller H. Wiegand appointment wa s made at the meeting of the executive commit tee of the Board of Trustees Fri day night, and becomes effective April 1. He wa s graduated from the College in 1935 and received a bachelor of science degree in architecture. In 1941 he received a master of science degree, also in architecture. He served as an engineer with the Department of Grounds an d Buildings at the College from 1936 to 1942. During that period, Atherton hall and White hall, and 13 other projects were completed under the State To Debate With Seton Hill College women and men de 'baters will meet Seton Hill in two regular non-decision debates tomorrow afternoon and night. The men's affirmative team, consisting of. Gifford Phillips and Paul Litwak, will meet' the Seton Hill negative team in 4 Sparks at 4 o'clock. The nega ; tive team, including Edwin' Lef kowith and Jay Headly, will meet the Seton Hill affirmative team in 17 Sparks at the same time. The women's teams, consisting of Yvonne Carter and Janet Hor ger, affirmative, and Marian Un gar and Shirley Gallagher, nega tive, will meet Seton Hill in 2 Sparks at 7 o'clock. Lois Pulver, Marlin Brenner, and Clair George will act as chairmen for the debates which are open to the public. Topic for the debates will be the national intercollegiate ques tion, "Resolved: That the non- ComMunist nations should form a new international organiza tion." Carnival Proceeds Given To Drive Proceeds of the annual Purim carnival, $395, have been donated to the United Jewish Appeal drive now in progress. The Purim carnival, held Sat urday night at Hillel foundation, is an annual festival commemor ating th e deliverance of the people of Israel from Persia. Workers for the drive were assigned to team captains at a meeting at Hillel, Sunday, Jac queline Cohen and Julius Mar cus, co-chair me n, announced yesterday. These workers will contact Jewish students on campus for fundS for the drive, which will continue until Sunday. The goal this year is $4500. The chairmen were asked to write letters to campus organiza tions for donations. The money will be .ised chiefly for relief, reconstruction and rehabilitation in Palestine. $5,000,000 General State Author ity program. Before his appointment as sup ervisor of plant extension in 1948, Wiegand served for three yea& as resident engineer for Colonial Williamsburg, Inc., Wil liamsburg, Va. Since 1948 he has been retained as a consulting en gineer at Williamsburg. During World War 11, he was senior me chanical engineer for the U. S. Navy department, Bureau of Yards and Docks, Yorktown, Va. He served from 1935 to 1936 as assistant architect for the Penn sylvania WPA. 50 Students - Join Summer ROTC Course Approximately 50 students will be enrolled in the special acceler ated ROTC summer course which will begin June 11. and end July 2, Col. Robert Daig, assistant pro fessor of military science, said yesterday. The course, which will 'be giv en for students who expect to graduate in the spring of 1952 or mid-semester, 1953, will be offered to infantry, engineering corps, and signal corps students, Daig said. The total number of expected enrollments include ten engin eers, ten signal corps students, and 30 infantry students. Col. Lucien Bolduc, professor of military science, said students enrolled in the course will be exempt from the draft and will receive 90 cents a day from the government during the summer session. In order to be eligible for the course, Bolduc said, students must have completed two years of basic ROTC, or be veterans with more than one year of ac tive service. Students wishing to enroll in the course should contact War rant Officer Chester Hanover in 2 Carnegie hall. Prof To Talk On Germany Dr. Hazel M. Hatcher, profes sor of home economics education, will speak on "Education and Home Life in Western Germany" in 121 Sparks at 7:30 p.m. today. Dr. Hatcher recently returned from Western Germany where she spent three months with the Public Affairs division, Educa tion branch of the HICDG, set ting up projects with students, and preparing teaching materials. She has had previous exper ience in education in South Am erica, spending one year in Chile for the Institute of Inter-Ameri can Affairs, Department of State. She represented the American Home Economics association two years ago at the UNESCO meet ing in Cleveland, and last year served in the National Associa tion for Foreign Student Advis ors in Chicago. The meeting will be sponsored by the Association for Childhood Education International. All members of the Future Teachers association and the Penn State Education association are invited to attend. Trees Sprayed To Stop Disease All trees on campus subject to scale and aphid pests are being sprayed with oil emulsion, W. W. Trainer, supervisor of lands, con struction and maintenance, an nounced yesterday. This is part of the year T round tree maintenence prograrii which also includes pruning, spraying, fertilizing, mulching, cultivating, transplanting, and winter protec tion, he said. The Physical Plant department is also moving trees which inter fere with construction, Trainer added. He said crabapple and hawthorne trees are being moved from Route 322 since the highway will be widened to four lanes this summer. Plants surrounding the THE DAILY COLLEGIAN; STATE CeILLTRGE, PENNSYLVANIA DP STUDENT—The Rev. Edwerth E. Korte, pastor to Lutheran students at the College, is shown speaking with Heino Tamm, Estonian DP student who arrived in State College last week. The Lutheran Student association is sponsoring Tamm, who will enroll at the College in September to study architecture. Estonian DP Brought To College By LSA Germany will fight against Russia only if it is forced to do so. This is the opinion of Heino Tamm, 18-year-old displaced per son who was brought to campus last week by the Lutheran Stu dent association. Tamm, a native of Voru, Es March 22. He will enroll in arc become a 'citizen and remain in the U.S. A resident of Auxbrg, Ger many, before coming to this coun try, Tamm believes that it will be another five years before Ger many will be rebuilt. Much prog ress has alre a d y been made, Tamm says, but t her e is still much work left to be done. The Germans have opposed a draft to supply men for Gen. Dwight Eisenhower's European army, Tamm says. They resent the Allied occupation and want the same rights enjoyed by other nations—i.e., their conquerors. Under Russian occupation in Church Group Elects Four Four Penn State students were elected to the Pennsylvania coun cil of the Methodist student move ment at a state conference of MSM held at Indiana, Pa., last week-end. Two others were named representatives to the regional Board of Education. John Blanchard was elected vice-president of the state council, and Albert Hummel was elected treasurer. Donald Snyder and Ned Cole were also chosen for council. Marjorie Shaffer and Lester Mc- Gonagle were named to the Board of Education. Main speaker for the confer ence, which opened last Friday night with a banquet, was Dr. Arthur E. Beckett of the First Methodist church, Hundington, W.Va. The theme was "Have Done With Lesser Things," taken from the conference hymn, "Rise Up, 0 Men of God." Emphases of the conference were full-time vocations in the Methodist church, summer proj ects, and short-term mission work. Summer projects for students were announced and discussed. Philosophy Head Elected To Society Dr. John A. Mourant, head of the Department of Philosophy, has been elected to membership of the Southern Society for'Phil osophy of Religion and asked to present a paper at the next an nual meeting. , Dr. Mourant attended a meet ing of the society in Charlottes ville, Va., March 8-11. library are being salvaged since an addition will be built, he said. Plants near Carnegie hall which were removed last year are being replaced, he said. In several weeks plant material and nursery stock will arrive for the new dorm area. After they are 'planted grass will be planted, Trainer said. • ' By MARV KRASNANSKY Auxbrg Resident onia, arrived in New York City *tecture in the fall and 'hopes to 1939 and 1940, Tamm had no kind words for the Communists. Asked what it was to be under Red rule, Tamm told questioners, "I wouldn't wish you to be there." Tamm described murders, vanishing acts, and the well known trips to Siberia. FDR Mistaken Estonia is today a "socialist's republic," Tamm said, but, he added, it is "the same as an oc cupied land." President Franklin D. Roosevelt made a mistake, Tamm believes, in making con cessions to the Russians. He con tends that FDR should have ask ed for the liberation of Latvia, Estonia, and other Eastern Euro pean countries . Tamm lauded the action of the United States in Korea. Korea, he says, is part of World War 111 and we cannot afford to back down there. Tamm reports unrest and op position to the Bonn government in Germany. Auxburg is heavily populated by socialists, he says, who are opposed to the present government in the U.S. zone. Nobody is starving in Western Germany, Tamm reports, but only the rich are living well. He reports a lack of jobs, and housing facilities, and food short ages. Hitler Innocent Many of the German people, he says, still do not believe Hitler was responsible for the war and the atrocities. The people believe that Hitler did not know of or approve the crimes that were committed, Tamm says. They contend, he says, that the gen erals, Gestapo and SS were re sponsible for the atrocities. Tamm will live at the Luther an Student home until a perman ent residence can be found for him. He was met in New York city by Raymond Rice, Lutheran association president, and Henry Rappold, social chairman. How Long Since You Have Had a Really Good Soda? er;°q,„.7,N) This is the kind of weather for one, and the E o N ittany Dell y offers the BEST in ALL FLAVORS! ,ITTESDAY, APRIL 3, 1952 95 Make Ag School Dean's List Ninety-five students in the school of Agriculture attained an average of 2.5 or better last sem ester and were placed on • Dean Lyman Jackson's honor list. Fifty-four of those on the list are veterans. The senior class placed 57 on the list; the junior class, 25; the sophomore class, 7; and the freshman class, 6. Students who averaged 3 for the semester are Kenneth Horton, Herman May, Edgar Raffensper ger, Elwood Richter, Anthony Stemberger, Charles Stine, and Paul Waitkus, seniors; and Evelyn Black and Harold Hawk, juniors. Seniors placed on the list are Georgette Babos, 2.85; John Bar ton, 2.64; Joseph Bedell, 2.78; Edward Bellis, 2.66; Elmer Birth, 2.84; Carl Campbell, 2.95; Robert Cash, 2.52; Sarah Chinn, 2.63; Donald Clapper, 2.80; Elmer Cook, 2.50; Thomas Dickson, 2.83; Jay Dixon, 2.66; Lawrence Drabiek, 2.60; Carlton Durling, 2.50; Don ald Egolf, 2.83; Millard Groben, 2.61; John Hall, 2.66; Robert Hamill, 2.52; James Haughwout, Jr., 2.84; Rolland Herring, 2.61; Carroll Howes, 2.55. Herbert Keen, 2.50; Roy Kin dig, 2.60; William King, 2.50; Alan Kivert, 2.50; William Loy, 2.55; Kenneth Maxwell, 2.52; Lewis Mayhe, 2.62; Edward Merek, 2.78; John Mest, 2.50; John Most°Wski, 2.72; Richard Mummert, 2.80; Meredith Orr, 2.80; George Phil lips, 2.70; Walter Pudelkiewcz, 2.56; Robert Reese, 2.88; George Replogle, 2.53; Kenneth Rolston, 2.80; Gordon Rowland, 2.76; James Simes, 2.83; Ward Stover, 2.52; J. Paul Strock, 2.82; Jerome Uram, 2.52; Dale VanDenburg, 2.50; John Walker, 2.68; Walter Weborg, Jr., 2.83; Allan Weise, 2.52; Gerald Wunz, 2.88; Dwight Younkin, 2.66; James Zeigler, 2.85; and • John Zerbe, 2.83. Juniors on the list are William Anderson, 2.56; John Crandall, 2.50; Fred Diliner, 2.55; Henry Gerhold, 2.52; Richard Hartley, 2.76; William Johnson, 2.56; David Kradel, 2.77; Joseph Macialek, 2.68; Andrew Mills, 2.63; Milo Moore, 2.55;- James Nelson, 2.68; Winslow Nicholas, 2.60; Everett Nicklow, 2.63. Elwin Orton, Jr., 2.55; Janet Rusiackas, 2.60; Edward Smucker, 2.65; John Spacht, 2.57; George Strickler, 2.66; George Welkie, 2.58; Russell Weller, 2.50; Richard White, 2.57; Ralph Yergey, 2.84; and Charlotte Zislin, 2.63. Sophomores attaining the ave rage were George Alleman, Jr., 2.83; Kurvin Batdorf, 2.57; Robert Healer, 2.68; Clayton Best, 2.68; Earl Grissinger, 2.82; Carl Her ald, 2.55; and Robert Leightner, 2.69. The six freshmen on the list are Ned Clark, 2.79; - Wilson Cra mer, 2.55; Wayne Otto, 2.51; Clark Sell, 2.68; Richard Updegraff, 2.92; and Edward Wickersham, 2.66. Hygiene Head Confers Dr. Kurt Wagner, director of the hygiene institute of a veter inary school in Hannover, Ger many, conferred recently with scientists of the agricultural ex periment station. Dr. Wagner's interest centered around animal diseases. Stop in Today! The NITTANY Across from Atherton Mal DELL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers