The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 03, 1951, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
Human Relations
Forum to Open
Twenty-six top officials, of the United Steelworkers of Am
erica, as well as outstanding educational and religious leaders, will
open a four-day seminar on human relations Sunday at the College.
The College Extension Services and the United Steelworkers of
Frosh Dance
To Be Held
On Saturday
Frosh Freedom Frolic, a dance
for freshmen, will be held this
Saturday night from 8-ll p.m.
in the West Dorm Lounge.
_ The dance is being sponsored
“'by the Women’s Recreation Asso
. ciation, Women’s Student Govern
ment Association, and the West
Dorm Council.
David Mutchler, chairman of
Tribunal, has announced that
men’s dress customs will be lifted
from 6 p.m. on Friday to 7 a.m. on
Monday while the dating customs
will be lifted from 6 p.m. on Sat
urday to 1 a.m. Sunday.
Joan Yerger, chairman of the
Freshman customs board, an
nounced that women’s dating
customs will be lifted from 6 to
11 p.m. Saturday and dress cus
toms will be lifted from 6'p.m.
Saturday to 7 a.m. Monday.
The dance committee consists
of Mabel Marple, WRA represen
tative; Barbara Werts. WSGA
representative; and Charles
Brewer and Thomas Durek, West
Dorm council representative.
The orchestra for the dance
will be announced at a later date,
and there will be no admission
charge to the dance which is open
to all.
Theme Named
Far UN Week
Emphasis will be placed on the
United Nations and international
understanding during United Na
tions Week, Oct. 21 to 27.
Oct. 24 has been proclaimed by
the President and the Governor
as United Nations Day. This day
will mark the sixth anniversary
of the United Nations Charter. On
this day and during United Na
tions Week, United Nations work
and progress will be brought to
the attention of the public.
A' faculty committee is plan
ning programs for the celebra
tion. There will be a combined
College and town effort to pre
sent a well-rounded program.'
Programs and activities will be
announced at a later date.
Dr. D. W. Russell, member of
the Pennsylvania Council, Asso
ciation for the United Nations,
and chairman of the-preliminary
committee of the Pennsylvania
Committee for UNESCO, is head
of the faculty committee.
Any person or organization in
terested in obtaining material on
the United Nations may get it
from Dr. Russell in 306 Burrowes
Building.
Judging Team 3rd
In Livestock Meet
The College livestock judging
team placed third in competition
against eight other Colleges at the
annual intercollegiate contests
which featured the Eastern
States Livestock Expositions in
Springfield, Mass. The University
of Massachusetts’ team won the
meet, with Cornell University
winning second place.
The Penn State team, coached
by Dr. William Henning, was
rated second in both the hog and
sheep divisions. Lester Burdette
was individual high scorer in
horse judging.
The other two team members,
Edgar Fehnel ■ and James Galla
gher, tied for second place in in
dividual scoring in the sheep di
vision. Gallagher rated third high
in individual hog judging and
Fehnel was second high in judg
ing beef cattle.
Pershing Rifles to Meet
Members of Pershing Rifles,
company five, will meet at Y to
night in the Armory.
Entertainment will follow the
meeting.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, COLLEGE. P
America are sponsoring the sem
inar.
Madame Pandit to Speak
Philip Murray, CIO president
and head of the United Steel
workers, will join President Mil
ton S. Eisenhower in addressing
the opening session at 7:30 p.m.
on Sunday in. 121 Sparks. They
will speak on “The Objectives of
the Seminar and Their Impor
tance.”
Madame Pandit, ambassador
from India, will speak on “The
Importance of Human Rights in
Today’s World” at the seminar
banquet on Oct. 10 at the Nittany
Lion Inn.
Others on the program are Dr.
Charles S. Johnson, president of
Fisk University; Dr. Howard Y.
McCusky, president of the Adult
Education Association; E. Earl
Moore, vice president of U.S. Steel
Co.; Rev. John LaFarge, editor
of the magazine, America; Rev.
L. B. Moseley, of the First Bap
tist Church, Pittsburgh; Rabbi
Morris Kertzer, chairman of the
American Jewish Committee; Dr.
Robert A. Luke, National Edu
cation Association; and profes
sors from Harvard, Yale, Colum
bia, Chicago and Wisconsin.
Tickets Limited
The opening session on Sunday
will be open to the public, but
daily sessions will be open only to
executives of the Steelworkers.
A limited number of banquet
tickets are available for $3 at the
Student Union Desk'in Old Main
and at 301 ‘ Central Extension
Building.
ICG Members
Plan to Attend
Convention
Plans to attend the conven
tion of municipal and local fi
nance l officers of Pennsylvania
were made by the Intercollegiate
Conference of Government,Mon
day.
Lee' Corter, adviser and muni
cipal representative of the Insti
tue of Local Government, said
the convention would give mem
bers an opportunity to “rub el
bows” with politicians.
The program on Oct. 12 and 13
will be the sixteenth annual
meeting conducted by the Insti
tute of Local Government' and
the College’s General Extension
services.
From ,300 to 400 municipal of
ficers will attend the conference.
Harry K. Butcher, a member of
Philadelphia’s Committee of Sev
enty, will discuss “Is Politics a
Science or an Emotion?”
The ICG members will help
with registration and attend var
ious meetings of the municipal
officers.
William Klisanin, president,
said that the central regional
convention of ICG, which will
serve as a preliminary to the na
tional convention, will be held in
Froth Stunt Works
Lucky
'Foolish. Hatmen'
“Tuesday is Froth Day”, are-the lucky words by which Joseph
Barnett won Froth’s “Foolish Hatman” contest. ; 1
Paul Poorman of Parmi Nous, the appointed “Foolish Hatman,”
was approached at 10 a.m. yesterday by Barnett, who had con
tacted many other hatmen before coming to Poorman.
“I was very surprised and
pleased when I found out that I
had finally made the right
choice,” said Barnett. “I had
asked so many other hatmen that
I had almost given up hope.”
The contest bjegan on Monday,
Oct. 1. All freshmen were eligible
who were undergoing full cus
toms. The rules called for a frosh
to find the “Foolish Hatman” be
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., and tp
say “Tuesday is‘Froth Day” be-
Return Unsold Tickets
Unsold tickets for the Kick
off Dance should be returned
to the Student .Union desk in
Old Main immediately, accord-,
ing to William Klisanin, Cam
pus Chest chairman. j
500 Attend
4th NSA
Convention
At the fourth National Student
Association convention, more than
500 delegates' from 200 colleges
discussed everything from Mc-
Carthyism to-deemphasization of
intercollegiate athletics.
A 'report on the convention,
held in August at the University
of Minnesota, was given to All-
College Cabinet Thursday ■by
William Klisanin, chairman of
the committee at tbe College.
McCarihyism Defined
McCarthyism, which was der
fined by the conference as “char
acterized by reliance upon legal
legislation immunity, guiltyiby
association, and unproven scatter
shot charges,” was condemned by
a 220 to 48 vote.
By an overwhelming majority,
the delegates voted to reaffirm
NSA’s stand on academic free
dom, urging that no teacher be
dismissed without being made
aware of the causes and without
being given the opportunity to
defend himself.
The delegates, representing
670,000 college urged
that college athletics-be returned
to the students. They demanded
that intercollegiate sports be both
de-commercialized and deempha
sized. f
Asks Five-Year Plan
The congress asked its college
affiliates to set a five-year time
limit for the elimination of dis
criminatory fraternity and soro
ity clauses, and to establish a na
tional sub-commission t o ex
change information regarding dis
crimination and segregation.,
Universal military training' and
the honor system were approved
by the congress which also fa
vored the continuation of student
mutual assistance programs, de
veloped at a meeting of the stu
dent unions of 19 nations.
Civil Engineers Hold
First Meeting Tonight
The American Society of Civil
Engineers will hold its first meet
ing of the year at the Masseyburg
civil engineering camp at 7:30
tonight.
Transportation will be pro
vided at the Mechanical Engineer
ing parking lot for those who
have no ride. The bus will leave
at 7 p.m.
Officers of the society are Har
old Light, president, Thomas Lar
son, secretary, and Jerald Geist,
treasurer.
March at the College.
Plans for a state convention in
April in Harrisburg were dis
cussed by Joseph Galati.
The club will hold an open
meeting 7 p.m. Monday in 214
Willard “to inform, new members
of the organization’s purposes.”
Frosh Finds
fore any. other greeting.
Being the winner, Barnett will
accompany Frothy in the Flaming
Foilage Festival race October 6,
sponsored by the Lock Haven
Express, which many Pennsyl
vania-schools are' entering. The
forty mile race down the Susque
hanna River will begin at 8 a.m.
and last approximately five'hours.
, Barnett’s comment: “I’ll be in
there paddling.” _ :
INNSYLVANIA
University Open
For Exiled Students
Another step iii combating Soviet enslavement will be takpri
bn Nov. 1 when the Free Europe University in .ejple begins its first
academic year with a student body of more than 100 undergraduates
from Eastern European countries now behind the trpn Curtain.
The university was founded as
an educational branch of the Na
tional Committee for a Free Eu
rope, a group of private Ameri
can citizens “united in their con
viction that freedom is' indivi
sible” Among the members of
this organization are such not
ables as Dwight D. Eisenhower,
James A. Farley, Darryl F. Zan
uck, Francis Biddle, Cecil B. de
Mille, and Spyros Skouras.
Paris is Central Branch
The purpose of the university
is,to provide a study center for
young people of both sexes, with
out distinction as to race or faith,
who find themselves exiled from
their countries of origin. It was
also founded to equip these peo
ple for future leadership in their
native lands.
The university maintains a
Western European branch in
Paris- as a central base of opera
tions on the ‘continent. Here,too,
is the committee on awards and
placement which will select those
young people to be assisted in
the further pursuit of their stu
dies at recognized Western Euro
pean or Near Eastern universi
ties and colleges. ~
Study Under Exiled Profs
At present, however, the main
body of these students will/ be
assembled in the Free Europe
College at Strasbourg, France,
and students will take many of
their courses at the University
of although the col
lege js in no way part of the
university. One of the require
ments to be eligible for these
scholarships is being capable to
follow university courses in the
French language.
The curriculum will also in
clude the Central and Eastern
European Seminar, which • offers
the students instruction in their
national cultural heritage. The
seminar will include a national
section for each country repre
sented by the students. Instruc
tion will be handled by exiled
professors and will be chiefly in
the native tongue.
A thifd component of the stu
dents' instruction will be a series
of lectures to be given by French,
American, and other visiting edu
cators and men of -affairs. The
lectures will deal plainly with
particular aspects of life in the
United States, France, ahd other
Western democracies.
Asylum for Exiles
Other work of the National
Committee for a Free Europe in
cludes the operation of Radio
F r e.e Europe iri Western Ger
many. Through its broadcasting
facilities exiled democratic lead
ers daily break through the. Iron
Curtain with messages designed
to keep alive the hope of free
dom and to get to the forces
working for ultimate liberation
inside the Curtain.
The Committee also provides
asylum, assistance, and employ
ment to individuals and groups
of exiles during their stay in the
West.
Further information concerning
the Committee and the Free Eu
ropean University in -Exile can
be obtained by writing the Na
tional Committee for a Free Eu
rope, Inc., . 301 Empire State
Building, New York, N.Y. /
W. Dorm Elections
To Be Held Tonight
Elections for 12 district presi- -
dents in the West Dorm area who
will become members of the West
Dorm council will be held from
7 p.m. to 12 midnight tonight in
the counselors suites of- each
election district. / - -
■Presidents will be elected from
a list of nominees who submitted
petitions with 10 signatures,,to
their counselors last ■■ week.
Vice presidents of districts hav
ing 105 or more voters will also
sit on the council.
The first meeting of the West
Dorm council will be held at
7 p.m. Monday, in the McKee Hall
lounge. ’
WEDifigDAY’, ScTOBER 3, 1951
By DAYE PELLNITZ
Tribunal Ratio
Change OK'd
By LA Council
The Liberal Arts Student Coun
cil Monday instructed Edward
-Shanken, president, to vote'in
favdr of the proposed constitu
tional - amendment changing the
Tribunal ratio.
In other action taken, the coun
cil voted in favor of an athletic
holiday Monday morning follow
ing, the University of Pittsburgh
football game. The council, how
ever, instructed Shanken to vote
against a proposed central pro
motion agency.
The council also voted in favor
of a scholarship fund to. be set
up from last year’s Spring Week,
profits, and selected an interna
tional understanding committee
with Robert Alderdice as chair
man.
The constitutional amendment
proposed by All-College' Cabinet
last week to change the Tribunal
ratio from five , seniors and two
juniors to five seniors, three jun
iors, and one sophomore was re
ceived favorably by the counciL.
The half-holiday was originally
set for the Saturday morning of
the Villanova game. Changing
the date was thought to benefit
more students. 1
A scholarship fund to be-set
up from last year’s Spring -Week
profits was recommended rather
than a loan fund, because' the
loan funds now in existence are
considered adequate. ~ * .
An international understand
ing committee was formed. Rdb
ert Alderdice, president of the
International Relations Club,
was appointed chairman, and
Hardy Williams, John -Baron,
Guyla Woodward, Ann Quigley,
and Edward Shanken, ex-officio,
as members. -
The committee will promote
international understanding with
exhibits and motion pictures in
conjunction with the faculty. of
the Liberal Arts school during the
month of October. Faculty ■ rep-,
resentatives will be appointed by
the dean of the school.
227 Register
In Dance Class
A total of 227 students have
signed up for the dancing. class
sponsored by the Dean of Men’s
dormitory counselors, it was an
nounced yesterday.- •
The beginners class, which was
to take the first 200 students,
closed yesterday and students in
terested in advanced dancing
were permitted to sign up at the
Student Union desk in Old Main.,
, Women, for the first time, are
eligible to enroll. All students
must live in the dormitories. The
fee is $1 for the , course, which
will last about seven weeks.
Classes will begin at 6:30, p.m.
Monday. The sessions will last
one hour each week.
Paul Kritsky,-resident counse
lor in Hamilton Hall, and George
Donavan, manager of Associated
Student Activities, will direct the'
program.,
About 300 students took les
sons last year.
Elections Planned
By Two Councils
.. Nittany. and Town Councils
each made plans to elect officers
at meetings Monday night.
The delegates to Nittany Coun
cil will' meet next Monday to.
elect a president, vice president,
corresponding secretary, record
ing secretary and'treasurer. John
Laubach,-retiring president of the
council,- chaired Monday’s meet
ing. -
Town Council will meet Thurs
day night to elect a president,
vice president, secretary and
treasurer. .