PAGE TWO Honors Day Awards To Be Given Monday Scholastic and alumni awards for students and social groups will be presented at the second annual Honors Day program at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Schwab Aud itorium. Eight Evan .Pugh scholastic achievement awards will be pre sented. Seniors Julian Gordon, John Jeffries, James Prete. and Jean Richards will receive gold medals. Silver medals will be given to juniors George Alleman, Guy McKee, Rocco Narcisi, and Robert Sorth. Jeffries and Miss Richards won the silver medals last year. Richard Grostefon, senior in in dustrial education, will receive the President Sparks Medal for improving his semester average from 1.70 last spring to 3.00 during the fall semester. Clark to Get White Prize Jean Black, senior' in arts and ,letters, will receive the John W. White Medal. Ralph Clark, senior in mathe matics, will be presented the $6OO John W. White Fellowship for graduate study. The awards will be presented by Dr. Robert L. Weber, chairman of the Senate committee on schol arships and awards. Phi Gamma Delta will receive the Sigma Chi award for the greatest advance in scholarship during the fall semester from James Wharton, retiring Interfra temity Council vice president. Distinguished Alumnus Awards Marilyn Levitt, retiring Panhel lenic Council president, will pre sent the Panhellenic award to Al pha Chi Omega for improving its group average from ninth place last spring to first place this fall in sorority scholarship. President Milton S. Eisenhower; James Milholland, president of the Board of Trustees; and Adrian'O. Morse, provost, will present Dis tinguished Alumnus awards to Lewis E. Young ’OO, George H. Dieke ’O3, Miles I. Killmer ’O6, John I. Forbes ’ll, and John M. Spangler ’ll. 'Biography'- (Continued from page one) sky as Feydak; John Aniston as Warwick Wilson; Allen Adair as Kinnicott; and Doris Leventhal as Slade Kinnicott. Sound Crew Mesrop Kesdekian is technical director. According to John Pakkanen, stage manager, the following stu dents are on Players’ crews: Sound —Jo Palmer, manager; Bill Nudorf, and Mary Beckman. Properties—Nancy May, mana ger; Anne Moore, Lowell Keller, Betty Rice, and Helen Lincoln. Makeup Myron Cole, mana ger; Joan Jewells, Yvonne Voight, Virginia Goyne, and Patricia Mar steller. Costume s—Patricia Jenkins, manager; Diana Mears,"Mary Ko zelnicky, Miss Rice, Ross Ban nard. Harriet Rakov. Advertising Crew Lights George Jason, mana ger: Frank Baxter, William Wen del, and Marcia Yoffe. . Advertising Walter Sachs, manager; Nancy Dahl, Sally John son, Ann Lacock, Carol Schwing, Richard Gibson, Terese Moslak, Dorian Heins, Cathy Keister, and Frances Dektor. House—Evalyn Horwin, mana ger; Miss Johnson, Herman Go lomb, Ronald Isenberg, Richard Kirschner, Ronald Lench, Luella Martin, Elaine Schleifer, Lois Troxell, and Guyla Woodward.. Lemy.re Wins- • (Continued from page one) ballots cast for secretary treas urer to defeat Bob Bowers, golfer, who received 501 second place votes. Others in the race for secre tary treasurer were Kurt Klaus, soccer star, with 474 votes and Jim Herb, IC4A indoor high jump champ in 1951, who polled 330 votes. Sledzik succeeds Pete Saranto poulos, cross-country runner, as vice president and Frey’s prede cessor was Hardy Williams, bas ketball captain last winter. Hardwood makes coals' for a campfire than softwood. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Spring Week Fete To Feature He-Men The All-College He-Man contest, the Spring Week ~ costume parade, arid the annual Sun Dance will highlight the activities of May 13, the second day of tjiis year’s Spring Week program. Deadline for entries in the He-Man contest and the costume parade is Tuesday. Entries ,for the He-Man contest are to include the name, address, age, height, weight, and phone number of the contestant plus the name of the organization sponsoring the con testant. They are to be turned in at the Student Union desk in .Old Main. Final Lecturer Dr. Bernard Iddings Bell Bell to Speak On Education At Last Forum Dr. Bernard Iddings Bell, na tionally known lecturer and writer on *education, will'give the final Community Forum talk at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Schwab Audi torium. Dr. Bell will discuss what American parents can do about the crisis in / education in this country. Consultant to the Bishop of Chicago on education, Bell takes a critical view of United States education in his most re cent book, “Crisis in Education,” published last month. ' 'His latest view is that the blame is not the teachers’ who, he con tends, “are not falling down on the job; the truth is that the job, ridiculously expanded, has fallen down onto them.” Dr. Bell has written 19 books, including “Beyond Agnosticism” and “The Church in Disrepute,” and' has. -lectured , extensively in this country and in England. A few tickets for the lecture are still available for $1.20 at the Student Union desk; in Old Main:, The state of North Carolina has In 1943 there were only 139 counties starting with.each letter passenger cars manufactured in of the alphabet except K, Q, and-America. Marching Group - James Geffert, Spring Week chairman, said that each group entering a man in the He-Man contest will receive 75 points toward the grand total of points which will determine the prize winners. Geffert said that under the carnival rules each group enter ing a booth in the spring carnival must enter a marching group in the costume parade. Any group not entering the parade, he said, will not be considered in prize competition. He added that all entries in the parade should be designed to advertise that group’s carnival booth. Entries, which are to give the anticipated size of the parade group, are to -be mailed to 412 Old Main. Greased Pig Chase The best-costumed group in the parade will receive 150 points toward the grand total, Geffert said. The best comic group will receive 100 points, the most tal ented group, 90. points, and the most original idea, 75 points. The He-Man contest will con sist of such field events as a greased pig chase, a pole-climb, and sack races. They will be de signed as a burlesque of the Scot tish carnival field events and the jousts of the feudal days'. Winner of the contest will be crowned Spring Week king and will rule along with Miss Penn State over the ensuing Spring Week activities. Men to Present Concert Sunday The Penn State Men’s Glee the Varsity Quartet,- and the' Hy-Los, a comedy group of 19 men under the direction of Frank Gullo, associate professor of musicr will present the.first of two campus concerts at 3 p.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. The other concert is scheduled for May 11. Laßue Durrwachter and Thom as Lewis will be soloists. Robert Klug, who took top honors in last year’s talent show, will ap pear as piano solist. Parade to Livestock An eight-pony hitch and wagon will lead the parade tonight that will preview tomorrow’s Little International Livestock Show in the Livestock Judging Pavilion. The show, which this year is dedicated to Prof. Franklin L. Bent ley, head of the Animal Husbandry department for the past 25 years, is sponsored by the Penn State chapter of the Block and Bridle Club. The parade, starting at 6:30 p. m., will travel from the barns down Shortlidge. road, west op College avenue, and back to the barns by way of Burrowes road. The eight-pony hitch and wagon were brought here by-the Holland Furnace Co. of Holland, Mich., especially for the event. Students to Lead Animals Also included in the parade will be three international grand champion horses from the College string, a German band, two hitches from the Western Penitentiary, and a two-horse hitch from the College. Students showing three differ ent breeds of horsfes 'will lead the animals in the parade. The Little International Live stock Show will take place from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday., Entered in' the show will be more than 100 stu dent fitted and shown animals in cluding sheep, beef cattle, and horses. All animals are from the College purebred herds and flocks. The exposition will begin .with the judging of sheep to be follow ed by the beef cattle and horse events, Judging of championship classes will complete the contest.' ■ Sheep Dog Demonstration , Besides the animal judging, a coed pig derby and a sheep-dog' demonstration will be included in the program. In the pig derby, coeds representing each of the women’s dormitories will race small pigs equipped with harness and leash. Carroll Shaffner, College shep herd, will conduct the sheep dog demonstration with dogs he has raised and trained himself. Shaff ner has exhibited. these dogs at shows all over the United States. Awards totaling $2OO will be presented to the winning fitters and showmen, 'James Gallagher, awards chairman, announced. All awards will be presented at a banquet, honoring Professor Bentley, at 7 p.m. Saturday. 6 Councils' Nominations End Today Today is the last day to submit nominations for representatives to the student councils of six of the eight schools of the College. The six schools accepting nomi nations are Liberal Arts, Engi neering, Chemistry and Physics, Education, Home Economics, and Mineral Industries. Elections will be held on Mon day, Tuesday, and-Wednesday for all of these schools except the School of Engineering, which holds elections on Monday and Tuesday only, and the School of Mineral Industries which elects Tuesday and Wednesday. Those interested in the student government in . their schools should not hesitate to nominate themselves, ’ Edward Shanken, president of the inter-student council board, said today. Nomi nation is not a difficult process, he said, and even if a person knows nothing of student government, he will not find the job of student council representative difficult. The school councils are a student’s most direct representation on campus and decisions made .here, vitally affect the everyday’life of all of us, Shanken added. Engineering Still Open . ' . Students in the School of Mine ral Industries may nominate,them selves by signing lists posted on all the bulletin boards in the Mineral Industries building. Two freshmen, two . sophomores, and two juniors, "will be elected to the' council. Voting will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the main lobby of the Mineral. Indus tries building. All persons interested in nomi nating themselves or others for' the Engineering Student Council, (Continued on page eight) FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1Q52 Preview Display Rabbi Kahn Wi|l Speak in Chapel Rslbbi Benjamin M. Kahn, di rector of the local B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation, will speak on “Who is the Religious Man?”' at 10:55 a.m. Sunday in Chapel in Schwab Auditorium. : A native of Lowell,‘Mass., Rab bi Kahn was graduated from Har vard University mag n a cum laude. He received the degree of Master of Hebrew Literature from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York City and was ordained rabbi in 1933. He-also took grad uate studjf in philosophy at Col umbia University. Before accepting his present position, Rabbi Kahn was assist ant rabbi- at Anshe Emit syna gogue in Chicago. Since coming •to State College, he has helped to establish a new Hillel Foundation at McGill-University in Montreal, Canada, and has been counselor to Jewish students at Bucknell University. Rabbi Kahn teaches classes in Hebrew literature and conversa tion,, and is president of the Na tional Association of Hillel Di rectors, a member of the execu tive committee of the National Association of Professors of Hebrew, and a member of the National Hillel Cabinet. , He is a member of the commit tee on college youth of the Rab binical Assembly of America, and vice president of the local Inter- Religious Council. Ed Commission Needs Stated By TV institute The need for a national commis sion for educational television and expansion of the American Coun cil on Education’s joint commis sion on television was. expressed at the closing session of the Edu cational Television Institute. The need for central production and distribution .agencies that would be able to make available high quality programs that indi vidual stations would not be able to produce was also recognized by the educators. Dr. Arthur S.'Adams, president of the .American Council on Edu cation, said “Such a commission could be of great help to colleges and universities planning tele vision stations. It would be par ticularly helpful in the matter of programming, in arranging, fi nancing, and in polling public opinion.” The- conference also discussed the need for an exchange system so that quality of programs pro duced at' one station would be available at other stations. 1 In order to bring about a better understanding of educational television as a tool of education, the conferees agreed generally on the need for research and experi mentation in the field. Cranberries are native to America, thej-first planting being in Massachusetts in 1800. Choose a DISTINCTIVE GIFT for ANY OCCASION at The Treasure House E. College Ave.