The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 24, 1951, Image 1

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VOL. 52, No. 30
2 Foreign Delegates
Open UN Week Today
Nuri Eren, a member of the
Turkish delegation to the United
Nations; and Dr. Jan-Albert Goris,
a member of the Belgian delega
tion to UNESCO, will discuss
“United Nations —Debating Club
or True Peacemaker?” at 8 _ to
night in 121 Sparks as. United
Nations Week opens on campus
with , a celebration of United Na
tions Day.
Dr. William H. Gray, professor
of ' Latin-American history and
chairman of the All-College Com
mittee on International Under
standing, will preside at the lec
tures which will be followed by
a discussion period. The lectures
are open to the public.
Was Press Attache
Eren is of the Turkish
Information Office in the United
States. Before accepting the po
sition," he was employed by the
Ministry of Commerce in Ankara
and as counselor at the Prime
Ministry. Later, he was named a
press attache in London. He has
represented Turkey at various in
ternational / conferences, includ
ing the United Nations since 1946.
Goris has been commissioner
of information for Belgium in the
United States since 1941. He has
published many books on histori
cal;' artistic, and literary subjects
in Dutch, French, and English.
Some of those published in Eng
lish include “Belgium in Bond
age,” “Strangers ■ Should Not
Whisper,” and “Growth of the
Belgium Nation.”
Marshall Plan Films
Tomorow’s program for United
Nations Week includes a series of
three different films on the Mar
shall Plan in action. These films,
(Continued on page eight)
Tribunal Gives
Two Students
Traffic Fines
Tribunal last night fined two
men students and gave another
a suspended fine for infractions
of campus traffic regulations.
One student, a seventh-semes
ter senior, was given a suspended
fine of $1 for driving on Pollock
Road between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 5:30 p.m. Student driving on
campus is not permitted during
class hours.
Another, a third-semester stu
dent, was fined $2 for continuous
illegal parking and ignoring Cam
pus Patrol warnings. He claimed
patrol officers used illegal meth
ods to see him in that they went
off campus and into his frater
nity! house to talk to him.
A first-semester freshman was
fined $1 for double parking in the
Thompson Hall area and for driv
ing on Pollock road during class
hours. He claimed he could not
get to class on time if he walked.
He said he had to go from -Recre
ation Hall to Temporary Building
in ten minutes.
Lists of the traffic rules .on
campus will be sent to all frater
nities and all living units in '.an
attempt to get all students ac
quainted with the, regulations,
David Mutchler, tribunal chair
man. said. - .
TODAY'S
WEATHER
CLOUDY,
: WITH
SHOWERS
STATE COLLEGE, PA.,' WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 24, 1951 PRICE FIVE CENTS
UN D
Dr. Jan-Alberi Goris
Open Forum
To Discuss
Loyalty Oath
The Pechan loyalty oath will
be discussed at a public forum
sponsored by the Graduate Stu
dents Association at 8 tonight in
117 Osmond.
Neal Riemer, professor of pol
itical science; Jo Hayes, super
visor of State College schools;
Guy Mills, former professor on
military science and justice of
the peace; .and Scott Keyes, pro
fessor of economics, will speak.
Passed by Senate
The Pechan bill, which would
require all employees of ,every
state supported institution to sign
an oath of" loyalty to the state
and federal governments, has
been passed by the Pennsylvania
Senate and by a House commit
tee.
Faculty members of the .Col
lege along with those from the
University of Pittsburgh, the
- (Continued on page eight)
Council Nominations
Open Until Friday
' Nominations for student council representatives in seven of the
College’s eiglit schdbls'are open until 5 p.m. Friday, Edward Shanken,
president of the Inter-Student Council Board, announced yesterday.
All nominations except those for the Engineering Student .Coun
-8 ‘a.'m. /, to'' s : "p.im~ each "day. y - : : ~—
Council representatives nomi
nated this week will be elected
Oct. 30-31.
.The School of Agriculture is
the' only school which will not
have' representatives nominated.
The Ag .school nominates and
elects its representatives through
school clubs.
LA to Elect Freshmen
. Two freshmen representatives
will be elected to the Chemistry-
Physics Student Council. The rep
resentatives must have an ' all-
College average of at least 1 at
the end of the semester. Once
elected, the representative re
mains on the Chem-Phys council
throughout his college years..
' Four freshmen will be-elected
to the Liberal Arts Student coun
. ciL.. Each individual • nominated.
Nuri Eren
Family Feeding
Survey Results
Are Published
The results of a year-long sur
vey on family feeding conducted
with the aid of a faculty member
at the College have been revealed
in the November issue of Mc-
Call’s magazine.
Dr. Pauline Beery Mack, assis
ted by her staff at the College
and experts from other colleges,
helped conduct a study of an 18-
family cross-section of this coun
try to discover if the families ate
“as they should.”
Dr. Henrietta Fleck, New York
University; Dr. Doretta Schalp
hoff,' University of Nebraska;
and Dean Velma Phillips, Wash
ington State College, worked with
Dr. Mack in the study.
Results of the work are now
appearing in an article entitled
“Come On, America, Let’s Eat!”
in that issue of the magazine.
Dr. Mack is director of the
Ellen H. Richards Institute and
professor of household chemistry
at the College.
in the School of Liberal Arts
must obtain 25 LA freshman
signatures.
Any registered undergraduate
Home Economics student who has
attained an all-College average
of 1 or better will be eligible for
membership in the council.
Report to Department
Twelve positions' are - open in
the Engineering Student Council.
A freshman and sophomore from
each of the six departments will
be elected;
Each engineering student coun
cil nominee must be reported to
the department in which he is
enrolled.
Two freshmen representatives
will be elected to the Education
(Continued on. page eight)
Sophomore Meeting
Sophomore class colors,
dance, and a football rally will
be discussed at a class meeting
at 8 tonight in 105 White Hall.
Turk, Wife
To Lecture
At Festival
Nezih Manyas, assistant direc
tor of t h e Turkish Information
Office in New York City, will give
an illustrated talk on his country
as part of the life in Turkey fea
ture of the International Festival
to be held‘Saturday and Sunday
in the School of Home Economics.
Mrs. Manyas, assisted by Fait
Atila, a Turkish student at the
College, will demonstrate Turk
ish cooking.
Traveled Widely
Manyas will speak at 4 and 8:30
p.m. Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday.
The Turkish food demonstration
will be given at 7 p.m. Saturday
and 4:30 p.m. Sunday.
Educated in London and Ist
anbul, Manyas has traveled wide
ly. Speaking four languages, he
has been in charge of Radio An
kara’s foreign language broad
casts where he personally edited
and read the news in English. His
“Talks on Turkey” have been a
regular feature of the Ankara
program since 1939.
Joins With UN Week
Mrs. Manyas is a graduate of
Constantinople Women’s College
at Istanbul..
The festival will be held m con
junction with the United Nations
Week celebration and the Turk
ish feature is important as Tur
key recently entered the Atlan
tic Pact nations.
Pledge Cards
To Be Mailed
To Commuters
Students who commute to the
College and will not be reached
by solicitors for this year’s Cam
pus Chest drive will have pledge
cards mailed to their homes, Mur
ray Goldman, solicitation chair
man, said yesterday.
This year’s Campus Chest opens
a two-week drive for $12,000 on
Saturday.
Commuters who receive cards
in the mail and wish to pledge to
the drive may turn their pledges
in to the Penn State Christian
Association office, 304 Old Main.
Cash donations will also be ac
cepted.
Students may either pledge or
give cash to the drive. Those who
pledge support will have that am
ount added to their second se
mester fees. '
Members of men’s hat so
cieties and Alpha Phi Omega,
national service fraternity, will
aid in downtown solicitations,
Goldman said.
Solicitation chaimen and dor
mitory heads for the drive will
meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the
presidential mansion for a tea
with President Milton S. Eisen
hower.
Plans for faculty solicitations
to this year’s drive are being
handled by Rev. Luther Harsh
barger, College chaplain.
Miss Junior Class
Sponsors of entries for Miss
Junior Class are requested to
leave pictures at the Student Un
ion Desk in Old Main this week.
The name and address should
be included on the back of the
picture.
Dram 61 Films Tonight
Two films, “Target for Tonight”
and “The Memphis Belle,” will
be shown at 7 tonight in 119 Os
mond for students in Dramatics
6L
ck
er Sports
4 Ot
Varsity golf, one of five sports
dropped from the College athletic
program last May, has been re
stored, Dr. Carl P. Schott, dean
of the School of Physical Educa
tion and Athletics, announced
yesterday.
The sport had been dropped
along with rifle, fencing, swim
ming and skiing in a move des
cribed as an economy measure to
offset the almost certain loss in
income which would result from
an expected reduction in enroll
ment.
Full Schedule Indefinite
The reinstatement was . made
Golf Coach
known by Dean Schott in a con
ference yesterday afternoon with
the coaches and captains of the
five sports involved. He said that
the economic situation had been
re-examined in the months since
the five sports had been dropped,
and that no way had been found
to restore the complete program
at this time.
It will be a matter of weeks,
however, before it will be pos
sible to determine whether or not
a full schedule for the 1951 golf
season can be arranged, according
to H. R. Gilbert, graduate man
ager of athletics. He said he is
now trying to contact Penn
State’s traditional rivals in the
hope of arranging a schedule.
Finished Seventh
Under the direction of Coach
Bob Rutherford Jr., the Lion golf
team last season finished with a
record of six wins and three loss
es, losing twice to Georgetown
and once to Navy.
The Lions also entered the East
ern Intercollegiate Golf tourna
ment last spring, and turned in a
665 card to finish in a seventh
place tie with a Georgetown team
they had previously beaten 7-0.
Leonides Heads
To Be Elected
Leonides, independent women’s
organization, will hold elections
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow
for the offices of president and
vice president.
Voting boxes will be placed in
Atherton, Simmons, McElwain,
Thompson, and McAllister dor
mitories. Girls in Womans Build
ing and the cottages will vote
in McAllister. .
The offices were vacated when
President. Doris Sher transferred
to the University of Tennessee
and vice president Alice Hen
nessey resigned.
Edna Baylson and Vivian Pet
erson are the candidates for
president. Betty Johnson and
Janet Magrini.will run for the
office of vice president.
Posters with pictures of the
girls will be placed at the voting
places.
The elections committee, with
Muriel Amsel as chairman, will
supervise the voting.
Committee members are Bar
bara Maneini,.- Grace Hampel,
Maggie Meyer, Mildred Martin,
Marcy McDonald, Sandra Gon
char and Hilda Hogeland.
und