PAGE TWO Council Nominations End Tomorrow in 5 Schools Nominations for next week’s student council elections will end at 5 p.m. tomorrow for five of the eight student councils. Nominations are open for representatives .to the student councils of Home Economics, Liberal Arts, Mineral Industries, Chemistry and Physics, and Engineering. Elections for the Home Economics Student Council will be held Monday, Tuesday, and Wed nesday in the main lobby of the Home Economics building. Girls may nominate themselves or others, Marilyn Franklin, election chairman, said. Nominations for student coun cil of the School of Education will be open ffom 8 to 5 p.m. tomor row through Friday. Nominations will be accepted for sophomore, junior, and senior'posts in Dean Marion Trabue’s office, 102 Bur rowes. A 1.3 .All-College average is required. Elections will be held Monday, Tuesday and Wed nesday. ‘ Nominations are open for sopho more, junior, and senior candi dates for general representatives to the Engineering Student Coun cil. John Miller, head of the elec tions committee, said all persons interested in nominating them selves or others should turn their names into their department head during the week. A complete list of the entries will be posted on all engineering bulletin boards by next Monday. One sophomore, junior, and senior will be elected from each of the six departments of the school next Monday and Tuesday. The elected representatives will meet Tuesday night with the old council to elect officers for. the coming year. 1.5 Average Needed Nominations for positions on the Liberal Arts Student Council will take place in Dean Ben Euwema’s office in 132 Sparks. Eight sophomores, 11 juniors, and seven seniors will be elected. Candidates will nominate them selves and must have at least a 1.5 average. Candidates accepted may submit a poster no larger than eight by ten inches to be displayed. Students may nominate them selves for the Mineral Industries Student Council by signing lists posted on bulletin boards in the Mineral Industries building. Two members from the freshman, sophomore, and junior classes will be elected. Voting will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday in the main lobby of the Mineral Industries building. Two Elections in May Nomination forms and instruc tions will be placed on the bulle tin boards in Osmond and Pond Laboratories for students in the School of Chemistry and Physics. Elections will be held next Mon day, Tuesday and Wednesday. Four juniors, .four sophomores, and two freshmen will be elected. Nominees must have a 1.0 aver age and length of terms are de termined by the representatives’ ability to maintain the average. Nominations and elections for the School of Physical Education will be held some time in May. Officers of the Agriculture Stu dent Council will be held at a meeting of the council May 13. Bel! to Receive Hetzel Award Jeannine Bell, senior in educa tion, has been awarded the Ralph Dorn Hetzel Memorial Award and will be presented with it at the Honors Day program at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Schwab Auditorium. The award was established in 1949 to be presented annually to the senior “whose achievement scholastically and in the other ac tivities of College life gives the highest promise of that kind of useful citizenship 'in the national life expounded by the late Presi dent Hetzel.” College Observatories To Be Open to Public The College ■ Observatories will be open to the public from 8 to 10 p.m. today, tomorrow, and Fri day, weather permitting. The ringed planet Saturn will be the special feature of obser vations on these evenings. ■ 'THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PEPTNS YL VANIA Olympic Tryout, NAAU Ticket Sales Hit 1993 Ticket sales for the combined Olympic tryout and NAAU gym nastic -meet have now reached 1993, W. R. Hosterman Jr., as sistant graduate manager of ath letics, said yesterday. The meet is scheduled Friday and, Saturday in Rec Hall, with men’s and women’s titles at stake. Afternoon sessions will start at 2 p.m., while evening perform ances will begin at 8 p.m. ' Hosterman said that ticket ap plications have arrived from 20 sthtes, • the District of Columbia, and Canada. The tickets, he said, have come from as far west as California and as far south as Georgia and Louisiana. Tickets are still on sale in the Athletic Association Office, 107 Old Main, with prices ranging from 30 cents to $2.40. All seats, are unreserved for Friday after noon and night. Prices are 30 cents for Friday afternoon and 90 cents for Friday night. A combination ticket will be used Saturday, with one ticket good for admission to both ses sions. Prices are $l.BO for un reserved seats and $2.40 for re served seats! As an added attraction, the Penn State Blue Band and the organ music of George Ceiga, chapel organist, will be featured. Young Democrats To Hear Rathgeber Lewis W. Rathgeber Jr., chair man of the Young Democratic Division of Pennsylvania, will speak to the Young Democrats at 7:30 tonight in 209 Willard Hall. Rathgeber, lecturer in history at the University of Pittsburgh, was an alternate delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1948 and will be again this year. The meeting was reported in yesterday’s Collegian to have been' scheduled for last night. The exhibition, sponsored by TV Cooperation Viewed As Best Public Service Education and commercial television can best serve the public by working together, William .Hadopn, executive director of-Tele programs Inc., told the Educational Television Program Institute yesterday at the College. ' 1 . In session for the third day the institute heard Hadopp say he believes education needs the experience of professional television personnel and the facilities and unlimited funds of the networks and local commercial stations to operate successfully. I. Keith Tyler, director of the Office of Radio Education, Ohio State University, said in a panel discussion on the significance of television fdr the educator that many colleges and universities have obligations that extend far beyond the campus. Effective Tool In land-grant colleges, Tyler said, television is a means by which information, needed by the farmer, can be quickly carried from the college or university campus.. R. Edwin Browne of the Divi sion of Radio and Television, University of Kansas, said that the television camera makes it possible for students to see dem onstrations better than they could' see them even from the front row of a classroom. He said for this reason alone it is an effec tive tool of education. Discuss Educational TV President John S. Mills of West- AA Chief To Sit As Adviser When the president of, the stu dent Athletic Association is elect ed, 'he will be one of three students automatically narried to the Athletic Advisory Board. The other two student repre sentatives are the Daily Collegian editor and the All-College presi dent. Other members of the Advisory Board include four members of the faculty Senate, five members of the Alumni Association, and an alumnus member of the Board of Trustees. Regularly matriculated male students are', also members of the Athletic Association after payment of the $7.50 fee. . The. object of the Athletic As sociation, according to its consti tution ahd by-laws, is “to pro mote intercollegiate athletics in the • Pennsylvania State, College subject to the jurisdiction of the Board of Trustees of the College and the authority delegated to . . . the School of Physical Educations and Athletics.” Included in the association’s duties are the handling and dis tribution of football tickets to stu dents and alumni. Art Exhibition Opens Tonight !n Ml Gallery Two groups of paintings en titled “Portrait of Power” and “Portrait of a Free Press” will go on exhibition at 8 tonight in the Mineral Industries Gallery. The exhibition, sponsored by the Department of Achitecture, will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily for a week, closing April 30. The group, “Portrait of Power,” depicts operations at the Sunbtiry plant of the Pennsylvania Power and Light Co., largest anthracite burning power plant in the world. The paintings are done in oil, water color, pastel, and collage by members of the Lehigh Art Alliance for the permanent col lection of the firm. Twenty-five were selected by the firm and will be on display in the exhibit. The collection. “Portrait" of a Free Press,”- was painted under similar arrangements with the Call-Chronicle newspapers of Al lentown. W. H. Rodgers, Jr., of the Penn sylvania Power and Light Co., will speak at the opening, ex plaining hoV members of the Le high Art Alliance produced the two exhibits. ern Reserve University, Cleve land, Ohio,, told the conference' he was satisfied, with the educa tional program conducted on a commercial station in that city during the current school year. - Discussion groups in today’s session will discuss, “Basic Plan ning for Educational Television.” SILL HELICOPTER DIVISION has excellent openings in new TEXAS plant or write H. A. Hamilton, Jr., Mgr. Eng. Personnel, P. O. Box 482,. Ft. Worth, Texas Food Demonstrations Highlight 'Weekend Many food demonstrations will highlight the School of Home Economics Spring Weekend program Friday and Saturday. This year’s theme, “Food and People,” offers unusual oppor tunities'for, demonstrations and exhibits of this type for the program, Dr. Grace M, Henderson,, dean of the school, explained. A demonstration on “Using Less Expensive Cuts of Meat” will be conducted by . Elizabeth Cook, field' Representative of 'Armour and Company, Friday night and Saturday morning. To Conduct Demonstrations The-Campus 4-H Club will pre sent “Ways with Eggs” Friday afternoon and night and Satur day afternoon. A demonstration scheduled for. Friday afternoon and Saturday morning will fea ture Centre County school chil dren who get their supper from an emergency food shelf. Myrtle E. Swanson and Mary Brown Allgood of the School of Home Economics faculty, will conduct demonstrations of “Quick Meals for Busy Women” and “Breads You Will Like.” “Roast That Bird” and “Broil That Bird” are demonstrations on cooking poultry that will be pre sented Friday afternoon and eve ning by Helen L. Danning, in structor in nutrition extension, and Janet L. Coblentz, instructor in nutrition and health extension. .Tool Use to Be Shown Marguerite F. Little, associate professor of child development and family life extension,' will present “Out-Door Cooking with the Family” Friday afternoon, while on Saturday afternoon Richard M. Bower, assistant pro fessor of hotel administration, will demonstrate “H av e Fun Cooking Out-of-Doors.” A demonstration qn time-sav ing methods by skirlful use of kitchen tools will be conducted by Delpha E. Wiesendanger, pro fessor of home management and housing, at 11 a.m. Friday. U.S. Air Force Training Film To Be Shown A 'film depicting the life and training of the Air Force aviation cadet will be shown at 8 tonight and tomorrow night in' the down stairs meeting room of the Elks Club, 119 S. Burrowes street. Captain Charles A. Hertzog, aviation cadet procurement offi cer of the Altoona recruiting sta tion, will be present to answer all questions applying to the aviation cadet program. Applications will be accepted at this meeting, but students will not be enlisted un til the end of the school year, he said. . A limited number of applica tions for pilots and observers will be accepted, Hertzog said, from students who' will graduate this semester, or from those students between the ages of 19% and 26%, who have 60 college credits. However, the Air Force is not interested in taking students out of college before they have com pleted their education, he added. This program is open to • gradu ating seniors, and other, students who will leave college at the end of the semester. German Club to Meet The German Club will meet at 8 tonight in the Grange Hall rec reation room with two plays by Hans SaGhs to be given by a Ger man 12 xdass. The plays will fol low a business meeting. See our interviewers April 21-22-23 WJSPffIESDAY, AFKIL JSj, 1882 College To Honor Kennedy Dr. Joseph Kennedy, priestly lecturer and chairman of the Wash ington UAiversity depart ment of chemistry, Will be hon ored by the College after he pre sents, the third in a series of five talks at 5:15 p.m. today in 119 Osmond Laboratory. Adrian O. Morse, College pro vost, will present a scroll to Dr. Kennedy at a dinner in the Hotel State College. The dinner will follow the chemist’s talk on “Iso topic Tracers and Electron Trans fer Reactions.” Dr. Lyman E. Jackson,' dean of the School of Agriculture, will preside at the lecture. Last night Dr. Kennedy spoke on “Uranium, Fission, and Trans uranium Elements.” Dr. Kennedy will discuss “Quantitative ' Kin etic Studies with Tracers” at 7:30 tonight in 119 Osmond Labora tory. This will be his fourth lec ture. The final talk will be given at 7:30 p.m. Friday in 119 Os mond Laboratory. The subject of this lecture will be “Self-Diffu sion of Aqueous,lons.” Dr. George L. Haller, dean of the School of Chemistry and Phy sics, will be chairman of tonight’s lecture. Dr. Donald S.' Cryder, professor and head of the depart ment of chemical engineering, will preside at the fifth and final lecture Friday. . 23 on Collegian Staff Promoted Twenty-t hr e e promotions to sophomore and junior boards of the Daily Collegian were an nounced yesterday by David Pell nitz, editor elect. , Those promoted to junior board are Mary Adams, George Bairey, Tamsin Bloom, Lorraine Gladus, William Jost, Robert Landis, Lu ella Martin, Charles Mathias, Nancy Meyers, Richard McDoWell, Charles Obertance, Lavier Pro copio, Sarah Sapper, Thomas Say lor. Sophomore board promotions were given to Elizabeth Allen, Philip Austin, Beverly Dickinson, Mary Lee Lauffer. Martha Mac- Donald, Homer McKalip,-/ Wil liam Pete, Eleanor Rakosi, and Nancy Ward. Hue, saturation, and luminosity are the three characteristics of color. - A FINE CHAMPION A FINE LEADER Vote for. Sam Marino ' for President of the Atheletic Assoc.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers