PAGE TWO Student Clinic Set for Weekend A student government clinic will be held at the College this weekend, opening with registration at 4 p.m. tomorrow and closing with a plenary session at 4 p.m. Sunday. After registration from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday, the delegates will meet at an informal gathering. On Saturday, registration will be from 8 a.m. until the first Eisenhower To Receive Alger Prize President Milton S. Eisenhow er is one of seven men chosen to receive 1952 Horatio Alger awards, given annually to men who have “risen from humble be ginnings to the most outstanding achievements and service.” Others named for the 1952 awards were Ralph Bunche, UN delegate and Nobel Peace Prize winner; James J. Kerrigan, presi dent of Merck & Co.; Charles Ket tering, General Motors research Co.; the Rev. Norman Y. Peale, minister and writer; and W. A. Roberts, president of the Allis- Chalmers Manufacturing Co. . The President had been named to receive the award last year, but he was unable to attend the cere mony. In order to get the award, the recipient must be present in New York City for the presenta tion. This year’s awards will be given on Tuesday. President Eisenhower was cited for working his way through school as a farm boy. The citations are given by a committee of the American Schools and Colleges Association, a non-profit organization which dedicates itself to fostering and enhancing the American tradition of success through diligence, in dustry, ability; and service. Groups Plan Pan-American Observances An open meeting of the Spanish Club at 7 tonight in the main lounge of Simmons will continue the College’s celebration of Pan- American Day. It was observed nationally Monday. The activities began with two lectures given last week by stu dents from South American coun tries and the showing of movies yesterday in Sparks. In other lectures of the seminar, Enrique Monge will discuss Peru at ■ 9 a.m. in 105 Me chanical Engineering and will speak on “Tourism in Latin America” at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 304 Old Main. Pedro Achenbach, of Uruguay, will talk about his native land at 9 a.m. Tuesday in 105 Mechanical Engineering. The public is invited to attend all lectures, William H. Gray, faculty advisor of the Pan-Ameri can Week committee, said. A fiesta at which Latin Ameri can dances will be taught will begin at 9 p.m. tomorrow at Phi Kappa. Marjorie Kahn, Martha Petrus and Marco Tio are in charge of the affair. THE PAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE; COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA plenary session at 9:30 a.m. Thip session will include welcomes, conference explanations and in troductions. The first working session will be from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 pan. Saturday. Participating students will be divided into two groups: Section 1 (schools under 2500 en rollment) and Section II (schools over 2500 enrollment). Topics will be freshman orientation, publi cizing and promoting student gov ernment, school spirit, and apathy. .Lunch will be followed by the second working session at 2 p.m. Subjects will be honor systems, faculty rating, administration student government-faculty rela tions, student government as a voice of the students, and national student association and student government. Dinner at 5 p.m. will be fol lowed by a meeting of officers at 7:30 p.m. A clinic at 8:30 p.m. will feature display explanations, and discussions. At 2 p.m. Sunday the third working session will begin, with discussions on representation, dis cipline, publications, and finance. The closing plenary session at 3:30 p.m. will be followed by ad journment. College Movie On Traffic Safety Wins Praise “Borrowed Power,” a motion picture produced, by the motion picture and recording studio of the College, has been judged the second best, non-theatrical film on traffic safety made in 1951 in the United States. Frank S. Neusbaum, adminis trative head of the studio, pro duced the picture and was co author of the script. Director and co-author was Henry L. Miller, while camera work and editing was done by Delmer P. Dunvall. Sound recording was done by Paul H Seitzinger, and Gerald G. Hutchison assisted in the produc tion. The award was made recently in New York, N.Y.,~ by the na tional committee on films for safety. The film' was produced for the A m e r ican Automobile Associa tion’s Foundation for Traffic Safety, Washington, D.C., ‘ and deals with the story of a young man who is courteous in most of his daily relations with people but . becomes careless and dis courteous as soon as he gets be hind the wheel of a car. YMCA Secretary Will At Chapel, Discussion Dr. R. H. Edwin Espy, executive secretary, national student coun cil of the Young Men’s Christian Association, will speak on “Re ligion with a Backbone” at 10:55 a.m. Sunday in Chapel. Dr. Espy will also be guest speaker at an informal discussion at 3 p.m. Sunday in the main lounge of Simmons Hall. A native of Portland, Ore., Dr. Espy was graduated from the University of Redlands, Cal., and received his B.D. from Union Theologoli.cal Seminary, New York City. He was awarded an exchange fellowship to Germany by the Institute of International Education and spent three years in post-graduate study at the Uni versities of Munich, Tubingen, and Heidelberg. Dr. Espy has spent much of his time traveling in Europe in be half of the World Student Chris tian Federation and International Student Service. Dr. Espy was youth secretary of two of the ecumenical Christian inal Concert Artist WILLIAM PRIMROSE, violist, masters a difficult passage in one of his recital numbers before a capacity audience in Schwab Auditorium last night during the last Community Concert of the season. Non-Commercial TV Conference to Open The Federal Communications Commission’s decision to reserve 242 television channels to education is expected to bring new mean ing to the conference on educational television which opens at'the College Sunday night. President Milton S. Eisenhower, chairman of the American Espy to Speak To 77fh Annual PSCA Dinner Dr. R. H. Edwin Espy, execu tive secretary, national student council of the YMCA, will be guest speaker at the 77th annual Penn .State Christian Association dinner. Today is the last day to make reservations for the dinner, which will be held at 6 p.m. Saturday in the basement of the Faith Re formed Church. Tickets, priced at $1.35, may be purchased at the PSCA office, 304 Old Main, or from PSCA cabinet members. Irene Jeffress, retiring presi dent of the organization, will in troduce the newly-elected cabi net members at the dinner. Grad uating seniors will receive recog nition for their work in the or ganization and gifts. John Baldwin, owner of Col lege Sportswear Inc., will an nounce the results of PSCA’s recent project. PSCA took over College Sportswear, Inc., for a week, March .31 to April 6, to raise money for its treasury. ■ David Lewis will act as master of ceremonies for the dinner. Chapel Speaker R. H. Edwin Espy movements which prepared- the way for the World Council of Churches, which now has its Council on Education committee chosen to guide the television pro ject, expressed confidence that the FCC’s action would “encour age institutions of higHer learn ing to move -more quickly and more positively in their consid eration of the potentialities of tel evision as an educational device.” State College was awarded one educational TV station in the FCC allotment, but a check by the Associated Press revealed that the only educational application on file is one filed last year by Miami. The conference at the College, first of its kind, will be formally known as the Educational Tele vision Programs Institute and will bring to the campus more than a dozen college and university pres idents, plus an impressive array of specialists in educational tele vision. President Arthur S. Adams of the American Council on Educa-' tion, who will open the four-day conference, said the allocation plan would give every. TV viewer “a far greater range of programs than wo,uld have been possible under any other plan.” • Daylight Saving Set The College will operate on Daylight Saving Time begin ning April 27, when the bor ough of State College changes to the summer time. Speak Sunday headquarters in Geneva. He was also executive secretary of .the first World Conference of Chris tian Youth which met in Amster dam in 1939. Upon returning to the United States, Dr. Espy traveled for a year interpreting European con ditions to students, churches, and community organizations. He helped organize the European Student Relief Fund in American colleges. ' T - , After being general secretary of the Student Volunteer movement for a time, Dr. Espy accepted his present position. .. In 1944 Dr. Espy was awarded' an honorary D.D. degree by the University of Redlands. In 1950 he received his Ph.D,-from Yale University, wher,e he-was on leave for special work in the field of religion in higher education. Dr. Espy has taught in the field of religion in higher education at Yale Divinity School -and at Union Theological Seminary. THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1952 Marshall Elected New PSCA Head Allen Marshall, sixth-semest,er forestry student, was elected pres ident of the Penn State Christian Association in elections held April 4 to 9. '■ Since the PS C A constitution requires that 50 per cent- of the organization’s members must vote before the ballots of an elec tion can be counted, the elections were extended an extra day. They had been set for April 4 to 8. Other officers chosen were Robb Keener, vice president; Patricia Jones, secretary, and Richard Smith, treasurer. -Committee chairmen selected were David Howell, finance; La- Vohne Althouse, program; Eliza beth Byrem, public relations; La- Verne Applegate, new students; and Ruth Freed, membership. Martha Heckman and Garry Norris were elected to represent students on the PSCA board of directors. The new cabinet Will be intro duced at. the, annual PSCA din ner Saturday'night in the-Faith Reformed Church. They will take office May 1. Co-chairmen of committees, two more students to be mem bers of the board of directors, and sub-committee chairmen will be appointed by the new cabinet early in May. ’ , NAAU Gym Ticket Sales Total 1652 Ticket sales for the combined men’s and women’s. National Amateur Athletic Union- and Olympic gymnastic tryout tourna ment scheduled for April 25-26 in Rec Hall have reached 1652, W. R. Hosterman, Jr., assistant graduate manager of athletics, said yesterday. , ' • More than one-half of this total has been sold for Saturday, Hos terman said, with 884 reserved tickets and 295 unreserved seats having been sold. For 2ll ducats, have been sold for. the afternoon ses sion while 262 ducats have been sold for the evening session, Hos terman said.. Ticket applications have come from as far north as Canada, as far south as Louisiana, and as far west as California.' Tickets are still on sale at the Athletic Association office, 107 Old Main. Prices are 30 cents Friday afternoon and 90 cents Friday night. All seats are un reserved for these performances. A combination ticket will be in effect Saturday night- with one ticket being good for. both ses sions. Prices are $l.BO for un reserved seats and $2.40 for re served seats. Oil Executive Will Address EandC Seniors Paul W. Boynton, employment supervisor for Socony-Vaciium Oil Co., will speak to seniors in Economics and Commerce at 3 p.m. today in 317 Willard Hall- ' Alpha Kappa Psi, Chi Theta, and Delta Sigma Pi, professional commerce fraternities, are spon soring the talk, which is open to the public. Boynton, author, and public speaker,- spends 50, per cent of his time each year traveling between colleges from coast to coast to .interview students lor positions ; w;ith'. -Socony-Vacuufn. He esti mates that he has interviewed at least 75,000 persons since he joined the company’s personnel depart ment in 1924. A native of Connecticut, Boyn ton the author of many books, including .“Six Ways to Get a Job,’’...‘‘So ..You Want a,'Better Job, “Recruiting for Industry," and “Selecting the New. Em ployee."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers