PAGE TWO' $BO,OOO Loss Reported On Last Year's Sports The College's 16-sport intercollegiate athletic program lost $BO,- 000 last year, according to Harold R. Gilbert, graduate manager of athletics. Furthermore, the College has lost_Money in sports for seven out of the last ten years, he added. The only years the College actually showed a profit ,was in 1948, when the football team played in the Cotton Bowl, and the AIM Plans Sat. Night House Party The Association of Independent Men decided to hold a house party from 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday in the West Dorm lounge, and John Laubach, AIM president, ap pointed six committee heads at the AIM meeting last night. Richard Marsh and his orches tra will play for the house party, Laubach said. Neil Lehman was appointed to head a public relations commit tee. He will work in conjunction with Leonard" Kolasinski, who was appointed to head the radio edits! committee. Colloquy Delegates Other committee heads ar e Wesley Tomlinson, Religion-in- Life committee; Franklin Reese, 1952 regional convention arrange ments committee; Joseph Haines, AIM keys committee, and Paul Zanoni, National Independent Students' Association correspon dence committee. Laubach and William Cole will represent AIM at the PSCA "Loy alty to Free Men" colloquy Nov. 16. A committee rep6rt was given on the regional meeting of Na tional Independent Students' As sociation, which was held last week at Huntington, W. Va. Reese, one of five Penn State delegates, was elected vice presi dent of this region, which in cludes Ohio, Pennsylvania, Mary land, Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Col umbia. Welfare Representatives The association also voted to pay the $lO national and $lO re gional dues of the ISA. Frank Simes, adviser, attended the Student Welfare Committee meeting last week and suggested that AIM and Leonides have rep resentatives on the committee. The motion was met favorably and has been referred to the Sen ate. AIM and Phi Sigma Sigma sor ority .will hold an All-College square dance Nov. 17 in Recre ation Hall. There will be a 25 cent donation. will Ladle tile droopin g s in deli g ht, beyond tile bliss of dreams Milton must have peered into a crystal ball to write these lines. How else could he have foretold the delicious, refreshing goodness of Coca-Cola? \ BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY COCA COLA BOTTLING CO. of ALTOONA © 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 1=MI:1= two following seasons, Gilbert said. These facts were brought out Tuesday night at a panel discus sion on "Intercollegiate Athletics in an Educational' System" spon sored by the American Associ ation of University Professors. Others Participating Others participating in the dis cussion beside Gilbert were Rip Engle, head football coach; Carl P. Schott, dean' of the School of Physical Education and Athletics; Prof. F. L. Bentley, chairman of the College Senate committee on athletics; and Prof. B. M. Her mann, chairman of - the Athletic Advisory Board. Ridge Riley, al umni secretary, acted as moder ator. Gilbert explained that the $BO,- 000 loss did not include coaches' salaries, scholarships, field main tenance, and other smaller items. Football bore the brunt of the expenses, Gilbert said, but on the other hand it was the chief source of income. The only other income to sustain' the athletic program was the $l5 assessment levied on each studentby the College. Schott explained the purposes of the Natnal Collegiate Ath letic Association and the Eastern (Continued on page eight) Student Last Spring Turns Prof This Fall How does it . feel to be on the prof's side of ,that desk? If anyone knows, it's Marlin Brenner. Buzz, who was graduated from the ' College last June, is back again working for his master's degree =and he's also teaching Econ 1 four hours each week. - "You know," he remarked, "it's a queer feeling being a student in June and an instructor in Sep tember. You're young enough to know what the kids you're teach ing are thinking,. but old enough to realize ho w: wrong their thoughts are. "For instance, when I was an undergraduate, I didn't always think it necessary to keep up with reading assignments every single day,, but now that I actually am on the other side of that desk I know a profs job is twice as hard if the students haven't lifted back ground material from the text." Milton's Conzu.r THE DAILY COLLEGIAN; STATE C.6'.. -- Z.;EGE.,- PENNSYLVANIA Prexy Eisenhower Visits Brother At LaGuardia Field Pres. Milton S. Eisenhower` spent two hours with his brother, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Tues day afternoon at LaGuardia Field in New York. Flying in a special plane out of Philipsburg to New York, President Eisenhower lunched on his brother's plane. "The visit was purely a famil affair," President Eisenhower ex plained, "and I enjoyed every minute of it.", Rev. Murray Kenworthy Dies in Indianapolis The Rev. Murray S. Kenworthy, father of Wilmer E. Kenworthy, director of student • affairs, died Sunday in the Methodist Hospi tal, Indianapolis, Ind. The late Rev. Kenworthy was a graduate of Earlham College and , Harvard University. He held pastorates in sever al Eastern cities in addition to several in Indiana, and was active in the Indiana yearly Meeting of Friends. Kenworthy wa s vacationing when he heard of his father's death. He flew home immediately. By ROSEMARY DELAHANTY The thought of having to speak before _a class three times a week is enough to scare 'many begin ning instructors, but not Buzz. Since he was manager of men's debate last year, and is a na tional champion in both debate and informative s p e akin g, he hasn't had much- trouble with his knees shaking during lectures. As he put it. "My experience only made me a LITTLE ner vous." However, he feels that keeping a class vitally interested in econ omics four hours a week is a (Continued on page eight) EtitopoOns,: - ,Nokoroer Getting Al'cilig . FiFie- DP Here Frosh Consider 2 Dance Dates- The freshman class last night proposed alternate .dates, March 21 or 28, for its annual dance. The dance - will be held in Recreation -Hall. Because Phi Mu Alpha has re served both dates fiir its annual dance, the offidial date for the freshman class will .not be made until the former makes its de cision. Blue and Gold was voted by the freshmen as its class colors. It was chosen over Blue and Sil ver, and Green and Gray. The resole tion passed by All- College Cabinet not to take down the goal posts after the football games was accepted. Gerald Maurey, acting president of the freshman class, named a committee to get the freshmen together to protect the goal posts atthe Syracuse game Saturday. The committee is Phoebe Pow ell, Louis Gud, Jane Evans, and Mildred McCowan. Lion Publicity M4eting A Lion • Party publicity ,meet ing , for students interested in publicity, promotion, and distri bution will be held at 7 tonight in 214 Willard Hall. TM*P4i 7 , N9VEMBER 8 ,1951 The first displaced, person to come to State College is ,getting along well,. according to . Ralph Cash, • chairman of the displaced persons conimittee. George Geciy, 19 year old dis placed person from Germany, is working at 0. W. Houts, Inc. Since his - arrival in June, Geczy has attended Christian Associa tion social affairs and open6lec tuies. He ' has sat in on some classes at the College. When•he first came to State Col lege, Geezy • alloted no - money in his budget toward entertain ment. Geczy expects to schedule some extension courses in the spring and, enroll at the College ,in, the fall in businesS administra tion. Seva Arefjev, 19 - year old Uk ranian, came to State College - in September. He was working • at the ,Nittany Lion Inn until last Week when he went to Philadel phia to see his ill - mother. L Plans were made for Arefjek to enter the College in the fall in. aeronautical engineering. The committee plans to bring Gerd Weissman to State College this week. From Czechoslovakia, Weiksman will work as a con struction engineer at the .Haw baker Construction Co. Harrison Receives Young Scholarship John David Harrison, senior- in the School of Mineral Industries, has received. the Lewis E. Young Award of $lOO. The award, established' by the Western Pennsylvania section of the Woman's Auxiliary, Ameri can Institute of Mining and Metal lurgical Engineers, is presented to an outstanding student in min eral sciences on the basis of character and high scholarship. It rotates among Penn State, the Carnegie. Institute of Technology, and the University of Pittsburgh. 'Harrison is president of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, mineral indus tries honor society; vice-presi dent of Tau Beta Pi, engineering honorary; and a member of Phi Lambda Upsilon, chemistry hon orary; Phi Eta Sigma, freshman men's honor society, and the Am erican Society of Metals. Brocaded pumps, dyed to match ballerina gowns, are a new fash ion trend.