The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 26, 1951, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
School Facilities
Deficiency-Prexy
Although four of every five children of high school age are in
schools, there is need of a “great educational awakening,” President
Milton S. Eisenhower told a gathering of Centre County teachers in
Bellefonte Monday.
President Eisenhower, in tracing the history of free education
in this country during the past 100 years, said that facilities of the
Fewer Text
Changes
Proposed
Recommendations for a stricter
regulation of changes of text
books have been made to the
Council of Administration.
The proposals were recom
mended by Ben Euwema, dean of
the School of Liberal Arts;
George Haller, dean of the
School of Chemfstry and Physics,
and R. C. Maloney, executive sec
retary to the President.
The regulations include:
(1) Students shall not be asked
to purchase books for a course in
which they are not used for spe
cific assignments.
(2) Each department shall de
termine a semester ahead of time
the amount of money to be re
quired for the books assigned by
the department.
(3) Each school shall appoint a
committee consisting of five fac
ulty members and two students to
approve all changes in textbooks
and study grievances in ordering
and selection of textbooks. Hav
ing no vote the students will
serve in an advisory capacity.
Book changes are to be ap
proved only for sound educational
reasons.
In order to change a text the
instructor must propose the
change to the department head.
If he approves, it will go to the
committee. The committee report
will be given to the dean of the
school and the department head.
If a change has been approved,
the dean will report it to the prp
vost who will maintain a file of
all authorized changes.
(4) The various • student coun
cils are asked to analyse text
book costs annually and report
abuses or complaints to the
school committees.
The regulations will take at
least a semester to go into effect.
New Members
Join Faculty
The appointments of four fa
culty members, all effective with
the opening of the fall semester,
were announced today by Presi
dent Milton S. Eisenhower.
Edward Dawson, research en
gineer with the SDerry Gyroscope
Co., Great Week. N.Y.. was named
professor of engineering research
in the Ordnance Research Labora
tory.
Dr. Carroll E. Heist, for the
past three years associate pro 7
fessor of bacteriology at South
western Louisiana Institute, La
fayette, La., has been named
associate professor of bacteri
ology.
Elizabeth C. Hillier, who has
been conducting research at Ohio
State University for the past
three years, has been appointed
associate professor of home eco
nomics education.
Dr. Hans A. Panofsky, for the
past nine years associate profes
sor at New York University, has
been named associate professor
of meteorology.
Films Will Be Shown
Three films depicting the de
velopment of the 'motion picture
industry will be shown at 7 to
night in 119 Osmond.
Members of the Dram 61 class
are required to attend the show
ing, which is also open to the
public.
“March of the Movies,” “Bio
graphy of the Motion Picture
Camera,” and “Antimated Car
toons” will be shown.
For 3est Results
Use Collegian Classifieds
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE,
‘ •'J' i. . .!*».
public school system as a whole
are not adequate, either in quan
tity or quality.
“In some areas the inadequacy
is downright pitiful. Many schools
are impoverished and they lack
teaching personnel and equipment
essential to the vital job of mod
em education,” he said.
Must Prepare Country
He said the people of today
find themselves faced with the
tremendous task of financing,
planning, and constructing needed
facilities on an almost unbeliev
able scale.
“It is a task that must not be
attacked piecemeal; no locality
or section of the country can be
left underdeveloped and unpre
pared educationally without ser
ious damage to the national wel
fare,” he said.
He added, however, that he was
not suggesting central control.
“Every unit of local govern
ment should review its tax struc
ture with respect to the. support
of its schools, and immediately
prepare to raise the additional
funds that will inevitably be
needed,” he said.
He said that every state should
put into use a new and frank
program to solve the present sit
uation which involves assistance
to local school systems.
Education Basic Support
“Education is still, as Jefferson
said, the fundamental support of
the American system,” President
Eisenhower said. “Its needs can
not—must not—be denied.”
Aware that additional taxes
for education would be unpop
ular, President Eisenhower said
we as a nation are spending too
much; too much on non-essen
tials, and added that in reducing
government spending," we must
use discriminating judgment.
He gave a seven-point list for
the improvement of educating
students for industrial jobs and
for further learning on the col
lege level. The list included de
veloping maximum competence,
to give every pupil competence in
mathematics, bringing every pu
pil to an awareness of the nature
of the world, and to learn the
discipline of critical thinking.
Varied Jobs Open
At Student Agency
By DOT BENNETT
Anyone who has a ladder and is looking for a job is wanted by
Student Employment Agency.
Even those students who didn’t, bring ladders to college can
probably find employment by applying to the agency.
At present, one of the agency’s most difficult problems is to
find someone with a ladder to do some work for a family in town.
The Student Employment
Agency finds work for students
who want to defray part or all of
their college expenses.
Allan M. Reece, supervisor, said
that so far this semester the
agency has had more requests for
jobs than during the same amount
of time any other semester.. Last
year the agency • found employ
ment for over 3300 students.
The types of work requested
by the students vary from .that
of a girl who wanted to work
with farm machinery to a jour
neyman draftsman who had ap
proximately 8000 hours exper
ience. -' '
Student Saves $3OOO
One student who applied to
the Agency worked nine months,
during which time he paid all his
college expenses, including room
and board, and saved $3OOO.
Reece said, however, that this
was unusual. Most students can
earn about $5OO per academic
year, if they have permanent
part-time work.
Reece said that many students
who contact him for work with
some social group, such as serv
ing for a bridge club, find their
reputation spreads, so that they
Press Futures Team!
The Penn State football team
is featured on the sports pages
of-today’s Pittsburgh Press.
Pictures, a complete roster of
the team ; and a story appear in
this special Penn State football
roundup..
Approximately 300 additional
copies of . the Press have been
ordered by the Student News
-Agency for campus distribu
tion. - 1
Senate Kills
Corporate
Tax Boost
WASHINGTON, Sept., 25—(A 5 )
—ln two decisive votes today the
Senate refused to restore an esti
mated $720,000,000 a year in new
corporation tax revenue to the
Senate’s huge tax bill.
By a vote of 62 to 20, it reject
ed an amendment to boost excess
profits taxes on corporations by
$600,000,000 annually.
A short time earlier Senator
O’Mahoney (D-Wyo) lost his at
tempt to eliminate from the bill a
series of sections intended to give
corporations additional relief from
excess profits taxes at the rate of
$120,000,000 a year. The vote on
the O’Mahoney amendment was
70 to 15. .
These were major setbacks for
an administration bloc which is
trying to move the tax bill closer
to the $10,000,000,000 goal set by
President Truman.
The House has voted for $7,-
200,000,000 in new taxes, includ
ing a sizeable hike in personal-in
come levies, but the Senate Fi
nance Committee recommended-a
measure calling for only $5,506,-
000,000.
Krasnansky Announces
CoHegictn Staff Changes
Paul Poorman has resigned as
assistant city editor of the Daily
Collegian, . Marvin Krasnansky,
editor announced yesterday. Poor
man will remain on the senior
board.
Lee Stern will replace Poor
man as assistant city editor.
Krasnansky also announced
the promotion of Miriam Ungar
and Eliza Newell to junior board.
can acquire work without going
back to the agency.
Long distance movers who are
not connected with a union have
made the agency their point of
contact in State College. Students
who help to unload trucks can
earn from $l.OO to $lO.OO an hour:
There have also been many re
quests for students to help install
television antenna, which involves
climbing several feet above roof
tops.
The student dry-cleaning
agency, news-subscription agency,
floral agency, and magazine, sub
scription agency also come under
the supervision of the Student
Employment Service. The fioral
agency and the magazine sub
scription agency operate only in
the men’s dormitories.
Students May Register -
When the agency was begun
four years ago, Reece had to ex
plain its purpose to the merchants
in town. Since then the agency
has been contacted by nearly
every business establishment in
State College. There have' been
only about 20 jobs the agency has
been unable to filL ,
iVAEIA
Fmr&ishAg Student
De I a yed by Detour
After making a detour by way, of Canada, Finnish exchange
student Kalle A; Sipila finally arrived here : several days after classes
had started.
To explain his odd predicament, Sipila said that booking pass
age on any ship out of Finland is difficult, because of tie great
demand.
When he learned that he had been chosen for exchange studies,
he had passage arranged from
Rotterdam, Holland, expecting to
dock in New York.
Solves Visa Problem
However, when Sipila’s ship
docked, he discovered that he was
in Montreal, Canada, without - a
Canadian visa. Therefore, he was
unable to enter United States
from Canada.
After a series of sessions with
Canadian authorities, this visa
problem was removed, and then
Sipila was confronted with the
problem of transportation.
Lady Luck was with' Sipila
though, for'a Philadelphia family
visiting Montreal offered him a
Kalle Sipila
ride to Philadelphia. Once in
Philadelphia, Sipila took a bus to
Penn State.
Studied at Helsinki
During his year’s stay, Sipila
is a guest'"of Alpha. Zeta, agri
cultural fraternity, Which will
provide'both room and board. "
He ■ has spent three and one
half years at the University of
Helsinki, where he majored in
farm management.
Now. he is enrolled as a special
student in the School of Agri
culture .where he will take, cours
es in dairy, genetics, grassland
farming, farm machinery, and
English.
Sipila lives in the village of
Luolaja, Finland, where his
father operates an unusually
large farm for Finland. The farm
is 112 acres of cropland and 750
acres of forest. The average Fin
nish farm contains 16 acres, 'Si
pila said.
Barons Issue Call
For Skit Talent
The Barons, Nittany-Pollock
social organization, issued a call
to all talented men in the Nit
tany-Pollock area who wish to
participate in the , Splinterville
Review, to start rehearsing their
skits.
The Splinterville Review is an,
annual affair held in December
for the benefit of Windcrest chil
dren. . . ,
, A ..committee was appointed to
arrange a new system of exchange'
dinners between the women’s dor
mitories and men of the Nittany-
Pollock area.
John Rossi and Lewis Goslin
were admitted to the Barons as
squires.
* T
“. . . brought to the HJp
screen with heart and am
skill, sophistication * ®
and great skill.” fl
—Philadelphia Inquir. fl
State Theatre— Soon i
—— 0
t’V';' * *' r r ', ;* •v~ v y-' •
WEDfefjtY/ 26, 1251
Aeronautics Meeting
- The first meeting: of the Ih
stitute of Aeronautical Sciences
will be held tonight at 7:30 in
219 Electrical Engineering.
The meeting is open*to all stu
dents enrolled in the. Department
of Aeronautical Engineering.
thru the
Looking Glass
with George
Yes, Harry, "Fantastic"
“Fantastic,” says a piano
player in Washington; D.C. Re
ferring, of course to the secret
weapons, cooked up to spoil
Uncle Joe’s digestion.
“Fantastic,” says I. Refer
ring,- naturally, to those pearls
Ethel is selling for only $1.20.
Smart (all graduated) pearls
like these don’t usually get to
gether for less than $5..
Look Heavenly, Betty
But Ethel has pulled the
right strings so lucky you can
look heavenly for a mere $1.20.
For this price you might ex
pect to string them yourself.
But these are complete with
sterling silver clasp and pack
aged in a plush box.
What’s more, they’re guar
anteed. If a single pearl chips
or peals, Ethel will replace the
entire string. All this for only
$1.20? “Fantastic! But true.
Pearls to Philadelphia
Of course Ethel has bushels
of other pearls you could string
from here to Philadelphia. This
is not a standard length. Any
length short of this, however,
Ethel now has Or can order.
, Pearls, you know, lead a dou
ble life. They can be demo
cratic or aristocratic: wear
them with a sweater or formal.
They can’t clash with any
other jewelry or any ensemble.
Across from Old Main
So for pearls, stick your head
(and neck) in at Ethel’s as you
walk down College (opposite
Old' Main). Don’t forget ear
nings. Choose from 15 different
sizes.
State College Isolated?
| While you’re drooling over
pearls, look at Ethel’s full se
lection of enchanting jewelry.
The copper, silver, and old
gold medallions, for_ instance.
And the crested heraldic jew
elry. Who said State College is
isolated? Not when it comes to
buying jewelry and gifts.
112 E . COUttE IVE,
S TAT E Cotl E 6 E, t A.