PAGE TWO Prof Shows , 'Em How 1950 Professors Milking contest. Dickerson will compete with two other winning profs from previous years at the Dairy Exposition which will be held from 12:30 to 5:30 p.m. Friday. Annual Dairy Exposition Scheduled for Saturday The 27th annual Dairy Exposition will be held this Saturday in the Livestock Pavilion. The show is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. and continue until 5:30 p.m. Seventy animals will be shown in this year's show, and will in clude classes of Jerseys, Brown Swiss,' Guernseys, Ayrshires, and Holsteins. Robert McKowen; manager of the Wernersville State Hos pital herd, and Cuthbert Nairn of Blackwood Farms, Douglas vile, judge the fitting and show ing contest. Each student fits and shows his own animal. This year's show has been dedi cated to W. D. Swope, professor emeritus of dairy husbandry and former advisor to the Dairy Science Club. Professor Swope retired last June after teaching 32 years. Tours of the College creamery will be included in the show. The tours will feature inspection of the ic e cream manufacturing unit, equipment fo r making cheese, butter, and milk, and facilities for pasteurizing an d homogenizing milk. Sampling ,o f dairy products is included in the tour, which is open free of charge to all students. Members of the Dairy Science Club will serve as guides. Featured in the Dairy Exposi tion will be a sheep dog demon stration by Carroll S. Shaffner, (Continued on page eight) Five Named To Judge Sing Finals Sunday Five judges have .been named to choose the winners of the In terfraternity-Panhellenic Council sing finals, to take place at 7 p.m. Sunday in 10 Sparks. Frances M. Andrews, associate professor of music, and Elizabeth Reynolds and E. C. Wareham Jr., instructors in music, judged the elimination rounds , Tuesday and will act as judges again 'Sunday. Other judges will be J. G. Cor dan, assistant professor of music, and Louise H. Dye, instructor of music education. Eight choruses, four fraterni ties and four sororities, will com pete for gold cups which will be presented by their respective councils after the final round. Competing sororities are Alpha Xi Delta, Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Chi Omega, and last year's win ner, Delta Gamma. Fraternities are Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Delta Theta, Delta Upsilon, and Tau Kappa Epsilon, last year's win ner. The fraternities will sing the College song, "Blue and White," and one fraternity song, both un accompanied. Sororities will sing two songs from their, sorority lit erature, and may have accom paniment with one. Officers' Names Asked FOr SU Directory George Donovan, director of Student Union, has asked that all sororities, fraternities, honor so cities, clubs, and other student or ganizations turn in lists of new officers to the SU before the end of the semester. These lists are needed for com piling the new Student Union di rectory for next fall, he said. Chapel Choir Tryouts Tuesday Tryouts for next year's Chapel Choir will be held Tuesday night in 212 Carnegie. No further auditions will be held for upperclassmen. Candidates are requested to report oat the following times: sopranos, 6:30; altos, 7; tenors, 7:30; and basses, 8 p.m: THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, MAW 0 4 .r1, - LEGE. PERNEYLVAIIIA Penn. State to Receive at Coronation Monday Miss Gifts Miss Penn State will receive more than 30 gifts when she is crowned Monday night in Schwab Auditorium, Janet Herd, chair man of the coronation committee, announced yesterday. Norman Alpert will emcee the festivities that will follow the coronation and Richard Brugger will be the court jester. - Dinner at the Eutaw House and a parade will precede the coronation. The five finalists, Pa tricia Hathaway, Nancy Queer, Louise Robertson, Nancy Sco field, and Joann Terhune, the judges, and the Spring Week com mittee will attend the dinner at 5:30 p.m. Entertainment to Follow , Harry Haenigsen, creator of the comic strip "Penny"; Martha Nold, representative of the Grace Downes Model and Air Career School; Norma West, representa tive of the Barbizon School of Modeling; and Charles Petnick, owner of the Charles Shop, will judge the finalists. They will choose Miss Penn State on the basis of beauty, poise and per sonality. • The five finalists will be intro duced at 8 p.m. after which the judges will make their decision and the coronation will be held. Engineers To Feature Wind Tunnel A display showing the develop ment of surveying e quip ment from 1869 to the present, and a water table and wind tunnel will be featured in the School of Engi neering open house which will be held from 1:30 to 8 p.m. Satur day. Other displays in the Civil En gineering department besides the surveying exhibit include a hy draulics-laboratory, soils labora tory, a model of a highway speed trap, and a photogravetery dis play. The photogravetery display will show the processes used in sur veying areas from an aerial photo graph. The\wind tunnel, in the Aero nautical\ department, ,is. capable of producing an 125 mph wind and will be in operation using models to demonstrate uses for the tunnel. The water table is Used to study the flow of air. Max Schuster, chairman of the open house committee of the En gineering Student Council, ex plained that an object is laid on a table with a thin flow of water on top of it. By viewing the water flow, the air flow around the ob ject can be gauged. The features of the Aeronauti cal department display will in clude a " structure laboratory, a Link trainer in which visitors will be allowed to ride, and the drafting room where students will work on large layouts. Students will explain and oper ate the equipment and answer I visitor's questions. 'Thursday at 8' Features Prof Paul Brownstone, instructor of speech, will be featured as the Playgoer tonight on the "Thurs day at Eight" production of "Born Yesterday" at WMAJ. The program, presented by the Penn State Radio Guild, will feature a review of the Garsbn Kanin play that featured Paul Douglas and Judy Holliday. - The play is a satire on the cur rent political situation. It has been called "a funny play with unfunny implications." • Morse to Speak Provost Adrian 0. Morse will speak to ,all students enrolled in Engineering 3 Friday. He will 'speak on "Education After Col lege," according to Eric Walker, dean of the School of Engineer ing. The entertainment will follow the coronation. A parade with the Pershing Rifles as honor guard, will be held at 7:15, p.m. All queens of the school year will be in the parade. The finalists will ride on floats. • Floats to be Decorated The parade will . form on the parking lot behind the Forestry building and will travel on Short lidge road, Allen street, Burrowes road, and Pollock road to the auditorium. Chimes, Cwens, Mortar Board, Phi Gamma Delta, and Alpha Tau Omega will decorate the floats. Andree Bloom, Nancy Dahl, Margaret Hepler, Grace Jeffries, Carolyn Pelczar, and Betsy Sieg ler will be attendants for the coronation. Gifts of Candy, Flowers , Miss Penn State will receive a trophy presented by the Charles Shop. Other prizes are, a silver and rhinestone necklace from Crabtrees; gloves, Smart Shop; pearls, 'Ethel Meserve; candy, Goss Confectionary; long playing record, Music Room; neck scarf, Egoif's; dog, Metzgers; souvenir, Treasure House. A box of Whitman's candy will Radio Station Plan Has 3-Yegr History By NANCY LUETZEL (This is the ,second of three articles discussing suggestions for the senior class gift. The remaining article will concern the student press.) - $ Last year the senior class gift of $6OOO was dgnate4 for a campus radio station. With this as a start, plans progressed to the point of final realization of the station. After the collapse of' a campus radio station in 1934, action promoting another was suspended until three years' ago when a four-student 'radio committee was appointed to investigate the pos- sibility of establishing, a new sta tion on campus. This committee visited 'successful college stations to ,gather data on systems cur rently in operation. When the senior class last year voted to donate $6OOO of the -gift fund to the station, a closed cir cuit system was under consider ation. Preliminary tests were made to determine its feasibility, since the installation at the Col lege would have been the largest of its kind ever attempted, and no construction plans were avail:. 'able. These tests caused the plan to be abandoned as impractical. Transtititter Received A compromise system wasde cided upon—the FM-AM system now planned. Under this system, an FM signal sent out over an FM transmitter will be converted into AM in dormitories and fra ternities in order that regular radios may pick it up. The in stallation can be expanded in definitely. The William F. Gable Co. of Altoona has donated an FM trans mitter and antenna valued at $26,- 000 to the College. • President Milton S. Eisenhower has appointed a committee of two members each from the student body, faculty, and administration to decide how the gift is to be used. Radio Pioneering New tests were run, and it was proved conclusively that the FM AM system will work, a spokes man for the committee has said. Because, installation of the con verter system would involve radio pioneering, the legal assistant to the chairman of the Federal Com munications Commission ,was con sulted. He indicated that since such a plan 'is a combination of two accepted methods, th e r would be no question of legality. If the senior class again votes to give- its gift to the student radio station, the money will pro vide: 1. Additional slave converters for fraternities so that a greater number•. of students will receive broadcasts on AM immediately. 2. Additional studio equipment —such as turntables, microphones, remote control equipment—so that students will be able to pro duce the' best possible shows. 3. A surplus for miscellaneous needs and operating expenses. be presented by the Corner Room; stockings, Glicks; evening com pact, Blair Shop; necktie, Kalins; $5O in portrait work, Coleman Studio; bracelet, Mur's; picture frames, Nittany Card, and Gift Shop; stocking s, learfield's; stockings, Bottorfs; cake, Electric Bakery; stockings, Danks & Co.; a movie pass good for one month, Cathaum. Perfume is being given by Rea and Derricks; and evening bag, Simons; dinner for two, Tavern; flowers, Bill McMullen; three car tons of Philip Morris, William Klisanin; and Lucky Strikes, Dar vid Olmsted, Fraternities Donate Money Miss Penh State's gifts 'will be gaily wrapped and placed 'on the ntage for the ceremony, Miss Herd, said. Each fraternity who entered a contestant donated one dollar to cover expenses. Flowers, for the ceremony will be bought froth this fund. Miss Herd said that this list of gifts may not be com plete and that she was hoping for more. In addition to Miss Herd, the members of the coronation corn 'mitten are Edith Burt, Constance Collin, Tracey Cushmore, Nulty Higgins, and Barbara Wilson. TRTIRBDAT, AP fl 8, -1051 Chem-Phys Open House Exhibits Set Special exhibits in such fields as physies, astronomy, and low temperature research will be dis played at the Chemistry and ?by sics Open Houk from '1 to 8 p.h). Saturday. . • Sponsored annually by the school's student council in coop eration with the faculty;thq..op,en house is held to acquaint the resi dents of the state with the opera tion and facilities of the school. Organic research an d micro scopy' as well as exhibits in the various under graduate labora tories will, also be shoWn. Personally-conducted tours will leave the Osm o n d laboratory lobby at 15-minute intervals to visit the chemistry and physics laboratories of the school. Guides will be available to conduct visi tors. through research and under graduate laboratories. • Visitors with' special interests may proceed directly to the lab oratories IA their choice. Prospec tive undergraduate students 'and their parents or teachers may confer with faculty members con cerning the curricul a- of the school. Lincoln Warrell, sixth' semester chemical engineering §tudent - is chairman of the open house com mittee. Dillavou to Be WD Speaker George Dillavou will ,discuss the international situation at the annual West Dorm. Council ban quet at 6:30 tonight at the Eutaw House. Dillavou, a resident coun selor, is working on his doctor's degree in speech. •- The West Dorm Council awards will be presented at the .banquet to James Eckman for scholarship, William Mihalich for - athletics, and David Mutchler for activities. The cups. will be awarded by Richard Taglang, chairman of the awards committee. A — special award will be pre sented to Jesse Arnelle, the council's representative in the All-College Hp-Man contest. • Norman Levin is chairman of the banquet • committee. Th e other members of the committee are Ronald Safier and EdWard Fleming. 30 Lion Coats Remain on Sale An increase in the sales of Lion coats to' seniors has left only 30 coats to be sold tomorrow, Robert Koons, chairman of the Lion coat committee,' said yesterday. _Senior's' decorated . - Lion coats 'will,be judged by members of the faculty' at 7:30 p.m. Spring Car nival Day, May 15, from the car nival ,grandstand, he reported. Groups sponsoring the three win ning coats will receive 25, .15 and 10 , points respectively toward the Spring Week trophy, Koons said. Lion coats will be sold' from 1 to 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Student Union desk in Old Main for $1.90 to seniors only. Pivot Still on Sale Remaining copies of PiVot,. campus poetry magazine, will. be on. sale again today for 2.5# cents at ' the Student thiiph ; desk in Old Main. Approxi mately 400 of the 600 coli,ids: printed have been sold, Renee. Kluger, business manager , said.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers