PACE TWO il*f*temPEAm Week Begihs . Monday Pan-American week begins at the College on Monday with a banquet at the Allencrest. The banquet, open to all interested individuals, will begin at 7 p.m., and all tickets must be picked up at the Student Union office before noon today. Tickets are $1.50. W. S. Macßae, Pi manager, is the speaker for the banquet. On Monday at 7:30 p.m., Pres WMAJ to welcome Pan-Ameri can week on campus. Frank Flan-1 nely, chairman of the radio com mittee of Pan-American week, will also speak on "House the America's Built," an explanation of Pan-American week. Closing Monday's activities will be a movie at the Nittany theater en titled "Rio Escondido" with Eng lish subtitles and starring Maria Felix. Spanish Play On Tuesday a radio program will be held from 7:15 to 7:30 p.m., when Dean A. R. Warnock, dean emeritus of men, will speak with a Pan-American representa tive on the topic "Dean Warnock Hails Pan-American Week." A play in Spanish, "Rosin Es Fragil," is scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednesday in 405 Old Main. Thursday's schedule includes a radio program from 8:30-9:30 p.m. This program will present a group of Pan-American students on campus, who will discuss their home country and then play rec ords representing their country's music. Record Dance On Friday a record dance will be held in the West dorm lounge at 8 p.m. The dance will feature North American and Latin Am erican music. Next Saturday, Pan-American day, a fiesta of Latin American music, a dance, and movies will be held in 304 Old Main at 8 p.m. The closing activities of Pan- American week will include a sil ver contribution tea and an in formal gathering to meet Latin American students on campus, to be held in 304 Old Main. Newman To Give Recital In Schwab A piano recital will be pre sented by Dr. William S. New man at 8 o'clock Monday even ing in Schwab auditorium. The recital, jointly sponsored by the Department of Music, the Association of American colleges, and the Graduate school, will be open to the public at no charge. Dr. Newman, who 'received his doctor of philosophy degree from Western Reserve university and has studied in New York, Lon don, Paris, and Florence, has ap peared as soloist with leading symphony orchestras and as re citalist and lecturer in many col leges throughout the country. He has won numerous awards, including a Carnegie Research grant to enable him to publish "A History of the Sonata Idea" in 1948. He has also had many articles published including a n'ew book, "A Critical Edition of Thirteen Keyboard Sonatas of the 18th and 19th Centuries." Dr. Newman has taught at Western Reserve university, Ban nington college and has served on the summer faculty of Colum bia university for several years. At the present time, he is a mem ber of the faculty of the Grad uate school of the University of North Carolina. The program Monday will be gin with "Praeludium and Fuga in E Minor, Op. 35, No. 1," by Mendelssohn and "Sonata in C Major, Allegro, Adagio, Allegro Molto," by Haydn. Following the intermission, Dr. Newman. will conclude his recital by playing "Variations on a Theme by Robert Schumann, Op. 9," by Brahms, and "Sonata for Piano No. 7, Op. 64," by Scria bine. The first movement made by the College to erect an infirmary came as a result of an outbreak THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENN dent Eisenhower' will speak over IN STATE COLLEGE FOR ARROW young men's 117 Finals Action-- (Continued from page one) posal as complicated and with so many phases to be investigated cannot be fully considered in only two meetings," the state ment said. Committee Refused Plan Br enner and Erickson also charged that the committee re fused to examine any specific plan for finals elimination, but would work only on the basis of Brenner's letter to the senate. sho SYLVANIA This letter set forth reasons for finals elimination and requested senate consideration of the mat ter. "At the last meeting, only six days before the senate meeting, we learned that the committee would not investigate or even discuss the merits of the specific plan as stated by the student rep resentatives," they said. The committee suggested that Starting April 9th ... NATIONAL ARROW WEEK celebrating Arrow's 100 Years of style leadership 1951 Campus lite has certainly changed these past 100 years. 'Back in 1851 there were only 160 colleges in. the entire there are country. Today, 1,849. No Rose Bowl game a t the end of the football season in those days. Tio 'footba season as a ma tter off act. Openll surreys were ment of. college standard equip Rotneos--there -wasn't a creana colored con en, on the landscape. It was then, a century agog that Arrow star factoring their famous collars • . . America and in a few years they were setting canarts styles. T crow hat's one thing that h asnt changed. A is still style leader on. s campuses. Co ll ege men eiery here know that tlae Arrow libel --art styles, filo, - - - _ Ali ROWSHIR 0 TS & TIES , . ARROW UNDIIIIIWIAX • HANDKERCHIEFS st, WORTS SHIRTS 1851-1951 SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1951 a second proposal, including the specific plan, be submitted to the senate. Brenner and Erickson said they considered. this "com pletely unnecessary." They reported that the com mittee refused to consider sched uling problems for the abbrevi ated time available for senior finals. The committee claimed that these problems were under another committee's jurisdiction. 1851 fine new Spring selections during National Arrow WeekZ