PAGE TWO Band Festival Concert to Be Recorded Concert Tonight Will Conclude 3-Day Festival Phonograph records of the fifth annual Intercollegiate Band Fes tival will' be made at the concert to be held at 8 tonight in Recrea tion Hall, James W. Dunlop, asso ciate professor of music education and host to the festival, announced yesterday. Both long-playing microgroove and regular 78rpm records will be available, Dunlop explained, adding that orders will be re ceived today and after the con cert at the Student Union or at State College 4724. The concert tonight will con clude the three-day festival in which 123 students from 23 col leges have participated. Twenty three members of the Penn State Blue Band are among the parti cipants. Dr. William D. Revelli, profes sor of wind instruments and di rector of bands at the University of Michigan, will conduct the band in the presentation of 11 numbers. The program will include “Pro cession of the Nobles” from “Mla da” (Rimsky-Korsakov), “Over ture for Band” (Mendelssohn), “Purple Pageant” (King), “First Suite in E Flat” (Holts), “Military Symphony in F” (Goosec), “Brooke’s Chicago Marine Band March” (Seitz), “Finale from Symphony No. 4 in F Minor” (Tschaikowsky), “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes” (Kern), “American Salute” (Gould), “Concerto in Jazz” (Phillips), and “La Sorella” (Gallini). ! Tickets for the concert, priced at $l, may be obtained at the Student Union desk, or from members of the Blue Band. Five Pledge To Second Blood Drive About a dozen students- have picked up pledge forms and five have turned in their pledges to donate blood on April 30 when the Rec’ Cross Bloodmobile will be at the TUB, Ted Allen, campus Red Cross representative, said yesterday. Goal of the drive is 200 student contributions. All the blood don ated April 30 will be sent to the armed forces in Korea and to serviceman’s hospital, Allen said. Students who wish to pledge blood may pick up forms at the Student Placement Office, ' 112 Old Main. The forms must be completed and returned by 5 p.m. next Friday, April 25, Allen said. After the pledge cards are turned in, he said, appointment cards will be mailed to the pros pective donors. * The Bloodmobile will arrive at the TUB April 30 after a one-day stop in the borough, where an equal number of donations is be ing solicited. The bloodmobile will be at the TUB from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. About 15 students will assist at the’ TUB on the collection day by handlin' refreshments for the donors and doing other work. Allen reminded students that persons under 21 years of age must have a written minor’s re lease form from their parents. - The Bloodmobile was on cam pus last fall, when a successful drive was held with about 1000 pledges being received. The blood donated at that time was .also sent for use by the.armed forces. Orientation Group To Meet Monday The orientation counselors com mittee will meet at 4 p.m. Mon day in 109 Old Main to discuss final arrangements for selecting student counselors for the fall semester orientation program. Daniel DeMarino, assistant dean of men, said yesterday the committee is trying to ■ set up a program by which new students enrolling in any school at the College would be . counseled by students already enrolled in that school. fHE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Air Force to Show Cadet Training Film * Capt. Charles A. Herzog, ‘aviation cadet project officer for this area, will show an Air Force film at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the meeting room of the Elks Club, 119 S. Burrowes street.' The film depicts the life'and training of aviation cadets'and will be shown to students interested in applying for the cadet training program. Herzog said that 150 applications will be accepted from students who will graduate this semester or those students who are single and between the ages of 19 & and 262' ana have 60 college credits. These men must be physically fit and if applying for pilot train ing, lust have 20-20 uncorrected eyesight. Applicants for observer must have at least 20-50 eye sight. corrected to 20-20. Ob server ratings include navigator, radar bombardier, interceptor radar officer and aircraft per formance erigineer officer. Herzog stressed that the air force is not interested .in taking men out of college who would otherwise be' planning' to com plete their education. The pro gram is for those men who will •be graduating' in June, he ex plained, o:. - who will be leaving college at the end of the semester for financial or other reasons An accepted aviation cadet will be deferred from the draft for four months while awaiting class assignment. He may enlist for a period- of two years. He will re ceive training for the first year during which time all expenses will be paid. In, addition, he will receive $lO5 a month and a com mission of second lieutenant on completion of the training. Applications will be accepted at these meetings, Herzog said, but the men will not be enlisted until the school. year is termi nated. Physical examinations will be given at the Olmsted Air Force Base, Middletown, at the conven ience of the applicant. Transpor tation, meals, and lodging.will be furnished to applicants. Educators Approve Lifting of TV Ban Educational leaders were agreed today that the decision of the Fed eral Communications Com mission to lift its ban of almost three years on new television stations will give new meaning to the E du c a tional Television Program, which will open • with registration at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Nittany Lion Inn. President Milton S. Eisenhower, who is chairman of the American Council on Education committee chosen to direct the TV project, said that the FCC’s action would “encourage institutions of higher learning to move more quickly and positively in their considera tion of the potentialities of tele vision as an education project.” Dr. Arthur S. Adams, president 8 Debaters Will Attend Tournament Eight members of the College debate teams will be at Duquesne University to take part'in a no vice debate tournament over the weekend. Representing the Women’s, de bate team will b,e Barbara Metz gar and Baylee Friedman on the affirmative, and Margaret Trout man and Sally Lowry on the neg ative. 3enjamin- Sinclair and Ken neth 'White will debate affirma tively for the men, while John Barrons and Alexander Stama teris will uphold the negative. Miss Metzgar and Miss Fried man, both freshmen,, are new members of the women’s squad this semester, while Miss Trout man and Miss Lowry, both soph omores, have been on the squad/ since last semester. Barrons and Stamateris, both sophomores, joined the squad last semester. White, also a sophomore, has been vdth the group four semes ters. Sinclair, • a freshman, has been on the squad since last fall. Kenneth Warner, graduate as sistant in speech, will accompany the women’s team on the tourna ment v'ith J F. O’Brien, men’s coach, accompanying the men’s team. of the American Council on Edu cation, said that the FCC showed interest in public welfare when, it reversed 242. TV stations for educational purposes. Adams will speak to the insti tute on “Is Seeing Believing?” The institute, which is expected to bring over 100 college presi dents, public relations men. and television, consultants to State College, will open at 6 p.m. to morrow with a buffet dinner at •the Nittany Lion Inn. Video recordings produced by Lynn Poole, Johns Hopkins Uni versity, will be exhibited' after the dinner, and Robert Fenwick, associate producer of the program along with Poole, will lead a dis- 5 Student s Slate Nominations Four of the eight student councils will accept nominations next week for. the April 28, 29, and 30 elections, while one of the other four, the Home Economics Student Council, will Accept nominations until noon today in the main office of the Home Economics building, The Physical Education Stu dent Council nominations and elections will be held sometime in May. Election of officers in the Agriculture Student Council will be held May 13. Represen tatives to the Agriculture Student Council are elected by the var ious clubs of the schooll The Home Economics Student Council elections will ;be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Wednesday. Pictures of the nominees will be placed on a poster next to the ballot box in the main lobby of the Home Economics 'building. Girls may nominate themselves if they wish, Marilyn Franklin, .elections chairman,- said, Nomination Procedure Nominations for general repre sentatives to the Engineering Stu dent Council will be open Mon day . through Friday for sopho more, junior, and senior candi dates, according to John Miller, head of the elections committee. Miller said all persons inter ested in nominating themselves or someone else should turn the names in to their department head during the week. A com plete list of the entries " will be posted on all engineering bulletin boards by the following Monday morning. One sophomore, junior, and senior will be elected on, April 29 at a meeting of the old council and the newly-elected members." Home Ec Nominations Nominations for positions on the Liberal Arts Student Council will take place Monday through Friday in Dean Ben Euwema’s office, 132 Sparks building. Eight sophomores,, 11 juniors, and seven seniors/will be elected. Candidates will nominate them selves and must have at least a 1.5 All-College average. Candi dates accepted for a place on the ballot may submit a poster no larger than eight by ten inches to be displayed at the polling place/ Nominations for the Mineral Industries Student Council will open Monday, according to Mil lard Rehberg, president. Students may n.ominate themselves by signing lists which will be posted on bulletin boards in the Mineral Industries building. Two members from the freshman, sophomore, and junior classes will be elected from an unlimited number of nominees. Voting will take place from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. April 28, 29, and 30 in the main lobby of the Mineral Industries building. Chem-Physics Council The new officers of the Educa tion Student Council will be elected at a meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday in 215 Willard Hall. Ralph Egolf, president, announced. The officers will be elected'by mem bers of the present council, the president being elected by the junior class members, and the vice-president' by the sophomore .members. The secretary treasurer will be elected at large. Students in the School of Chemiistry and Physics may nom inate themselves for the* student cussion on science productions. Beginning at 9:30 a.m. Monday, the daily sessions will be moved to the Air National Guard Arm ory. Dr. Allen B. DuMont, presi-. dent of the DuMont Laboratories Inc., will open the Monday ses sion. with a talk on “Educational Television.” ~ The iinstitute will continue through Thursday, .with many of the sessions being small discussion groups. Other speakers on the program include A. S. Dunton, chairman of the board of governors of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.;. William Hodapp,. executive direc tor of Teleprograms; and John S. Millis.- president of Western Re serve University., s SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1952 Councils council. Nomination forms and instructions ■w i 11, be posted';on bulletin boards in Osmond and Pond Laboratories until Friday. Elections will be held April ."28, 29, and 30. . Four juniors, four sophomores, and .two freshmen-.will be, electgd to the council. Nominees; .must have a 1.0 All-College average. Length of terms are determined by the members’ ability to main tain a 1.0 average. Conference To Meet At Luncheon The Pennsylvania Conference on Family Relations will meet at a luncheon in the' the Allencrest Tea Room today. With them will be the group that conferred Fri day at the College on human re lations in the home, school, and community. Dr. Ralph H. Ojemann, associ ate professor of psychology and parent education at the Univer sity of will speak on “.The Rule of the \ Family in Mental Health.” ' " featured speaker at the Penn sylvania Conference meeting fol lowing the luncheon will be the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John O’Grady, president of the National Council on Family Relations and secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Charities. His topic is to be “The Community’s Stake in Family Life.” - Dr. William M. Smith Jr., pres ident of the group, and firs. Jessie Bernard and Clifford R. Adams will present a panel discussion, “What’s Penn State Doing in Mar riage and Family Research?” Mar guerite F. Little will show movies on family life and the group will discuss the subject “Communities Act for Family Life.” Brazil Attache Will Address Language Club As his first assignment as cul tural attache of the Brazilian del egation to the Organization of American- States in Washington, Pedro Xisto Pereira De Carvalho will speak at an open 'meeting of the Portuguese Club at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Allencrest Tea Room. - A dinner-will precede his dis cussion of modem Brazil. Reser vations may be made by calling Dr. Gerald Moser, - professor of Romance languages, or Richard- Killinger, president of the Portu guese Club, by noon Monday. Dr. Xisto will illustrate his talk with slides. No reservations are necessary' to attend the lec ture. Dr. Xisto is a~ lawyer by. pro fession. He is from Sao Paulo, Brazil, where he was -director of the Museum of Modern Art. He Held a position similar to , his pre sent one with the American gov ernment in Bolivia. According to Dr. Moser, he is interested ,ih learning methods of teaching arts and letters in American univer sities. ' . Sigma Gamma Epsilon Sigma Gamma Epsilon, mineral industries', honorary, recently in itiated Joseph Cervik, Frederick Horning, Donald Michelsen, Harry Shadle, Jojhn Young, Stuart;' Big ler, George Kunze, and Bernard Rolfe.’
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