PAGE TWO Judd to Speak To 3d Forum , "Problems America Faces Today at Home and Abroad" will be discussed by Dr. Walter H. Judd, Republican congressman from Minnesota, at the third Community Forum program at 8 tonight in Schwab Auditorium. A nationally recognized -authority on foreign affairs, Judd has interpreted the situation in the Far East from his own ten -years' experience in the Orient. Single reserved seat tickets for $1.20 will be on sale until lec ture time at the Student Union desk in Old Main. A native of Rising City, Neb., Dr. Judd worked his way through high school and earned his edu cation at the University of Ne braska Medical School by wash ing dishes, playing in bands, and teaching zoology at the University of Omaha.—During World War I he served in the Army as a lieu tenant in field artillery. Mayo Clinic Fellowship In 1925, Judd was sent to bandit and malaria infested. South China as a medical missionary under the auspices of the foreign mis sion board of the Congregational Church. He survived the bandits and Communists, but repeated attacks of malaria forced his re turn to the United States. After lecturing for sever al months in churches and colleges about the spreading threat of Communism and the Japanese military machine. Judd received a fellowship in surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. He returned to North China in 1934 to supervise a 125 bed hos pital. With his staff he brought tjie hospital through a Commu nist revolution and Japanese in vasion and at the same time im proved its work from 33 to 83 per cent self-supporting. Elected To House When Japan's armies moved in to North China he was forced to work under Japanese domination for five months. He returned horne in 1938 and resumed his lecture tour to carry his tales of Japanese aggression to more than 1400 audiences in 46 states. Judd was elected to the House of Representatives in 1942. He is now serving his fifth consecutive term. In Congress Judd cam paigned for an international or ganization for peace before the United Nations w a s founded. Later he authorized _legislation for the UN's World Health Or ganization Bill and the Inter national Children's Emergency Fund. - Judd fathered the United States- Philippine Mutual Security. Pact and attended the signing of the rtact as a delegate of the United States. More recently the congressman has authored legislation for a Pa cific defense pact and a bill to remove racial discrimination from United States immigration laws. Kale to Appear On Guild Show Shrikrishna Kale of India will be interviewed by Laßue Fritz on "World at Our Door," spon sored by the Radio Guild and the Department of Speceh, at 7:45 tonight over WMAJ. Kale received his master's de gree in psychology from Colum bia University and is working on his doctorate from Columbia. He is at the College for special work in teaching language students through sound movies. Marian Brodbeck will direct the program. Others in the cast are Donald Klinepeter, announ cer; Patrick Runco, sound; and Allen Klein, engineer. Engineering Students Eligible for Contest The Heli-Coil Corporation of Danbury will offer cash awards totaling $1750 to engineering stu dents submitting the most origi nal new uses for Heli-Coil thread inserts. Applications for the student de sign award program may be ob tained from Design Award Pro gram, Heli-Coil Corporation, Dan bury, Conn. Directories Available A limited number of student directories and faculty directories are still on sale in 4 Willard. Stu dent directories are 35 cents, and faculty directories are 25 cents. VIE DAILY COLLEGIAN, StrATZ COLLEGE, i , Brirt yiIVANTA College Plans New AFROTC Grad Course Penn State is included among eight universities that will offer graduate work in meteorology to Tune Air Force ROTC graduates who have credits for one year of college physics and mathemat ics through integral calculus. Men in this category may ap ply through their PAS&T imme diately for this one year govern ment-paid course and later as signment as an air weather offi cer. While in school they will hold the rank of second lieutenant and receive _full pay and allow ances. Credits received during the course may be applied toward a master's degree. Other schools to offer this course are Massachusetts Insti tute of Technology, New York University, University of Cali fornia at Los Angeles, University of Chicago, University of Wash ington, Florida State University, and St. Louis University. College to Aid Farm Exhibit Largely through the School of Agriculture, the College will con tribute to the 37th Pennsylvania Farm Show and the organization meetings to be held Monday through Friday in Harrisburg. Dr. Lyman E. Jackson, dean of the School of Agriculture, and J. Martin Fry, director of agricul tural and home economics exten sion, are members of the Farm Show Commission, which super vises the exhibition. Harold R. McCulloch, assistant director of agricultural extension, is secre tary of the commission. Many other members and for mer members of the College staff are serving as judges of the com petitive exhibits or as speakers at farm organization meetings held during the Farm Show. 27 Students Withdraw Twenty-seven students have withdrawn from the College, ac cording to the Jan. 9 Faculty Bulletin. Reasons given for with drawal were: personal 14, mili tary service, four, financial two, illness, four, scholastic two, un known one. Be Sure to See. . . GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'S COMEDY MAJOR BARBARA at Center Stage • January 9 and 10 Tickets $1 at S.U. or at the door About 500 Expected To Graduate Over 500 students are expected to receive degrees at the fall se mester graduation exercises Jan. 27, it has been announced. Of the graduates, 410 are sched uled to receive their bachelor de grees, 90 master's degrees, and 38 doctorates. Officials in the Office of the Registrar said, however, that names , may be added or re moved from the list of candidates before commencement. This is more true of candidates for mas ter's and doctor's . degrees, the spokesman said. The School of Liberal Arts has the largest number of candidates for the B.A. degree, 131. The School of Engineering, with 76 candidates for graduation, has the most candidates for the B.S. de gree. The School of Education ha s eight candidates for B.A. degrees and 54 for B.S. degrees. Fifty-six from the School of Agriculture, 15 in the School of Chemistry and Physics, 23 in the School of Home Economics, 24 from the School of Mineral Industries, and nine from the School of Physical Education and Athlefics are also candidates for B.S. degrees. Eleven . are candidates for M. degrees. Master of Science de grees are scheduled for 64, while 1.5 are listed for Master of Educa tion degrees. One person is a can didate for Master of Mechanical Engineering degree. Nine are slated for a doctor of education degree, and 29 ar e candidates . for doctor of philoso phy degrees. Library Opens Cartoon Exhibit By EVIE KItLAR Anybody want a good laugh? If you are one of those students who contemplates finals with the suspicion that, you'll never laugh again, Profs. Harold E. Dickson and John Y. Roy invite you to amble through the Pattee library lobby any time beginning today through Jan. 20. Professors Dickson and Roy, chairmen of the exhibits commit tee of the division of fine and applied arts, which is sponsoring a dou b 1 e-barrelled cartoonist show. The cartoonists are Penn State alumni, "Ed" Zern, class of '32, and John Morris Price, class of '39. Both are former art editors of Froth, campus humor maga zine. Edward Zern, who recently be came vice president of Geyer Ad vertising, 'lnc., is the only adver tising copy writer with a byline. That byline reads: By Ed Zern. Went To California • The Nov. 7 issue of Printer's Ink caught• a glimpse of Zern's impact upon the American family when they said: "Whether he's aware of it or not, Ed Zern has been on a crusade since his ad vertising career began back in 1934. His crusade has been to save what little humor is left in American advertising. He ha s managed to pull this feat off with agility, imagination, and with Stanislayskian grandeur." Zern's record states that after leaving the llittany valley, he was a merchant seaman. He then went into the advertising game, working first for N. W. Ayer & Sons. He left in 1943 to become advertising 'manager for Warner Bros. in California. He next took his family to Florida for the fishing season. This move resulted in the publi cation of his first book of car toons, "To Hell with Fishing." Suceeding books were "To Hell with Hunting," "How to Tell Fish Officials Approve Animal Disease Lab Prelimmary plans- for the construction of a new concrete block Animal Disease Research Center have been approved by College officials.. A $lOO,OOO appropriation was made for this purpose by the last General Assembly: If the plans are completed bids may be open ed sometime in March and con structioil may begin in the spring, John Miller, chief draftsman, has announced The new T-shaped, one story building is to be located to the rear of Orchard No. 3 on the Col lege Farms, midway between the fruit storage and the old soil conservation experiment station. This site provides for any future expansion and is isolated -from other poultry and livestock which could spread contageous diseases. The main laboratories, and.four offices for veterinarians, bacteri ologists or pathologists, who, :will supervise the 'research studieS. will be in the front part of the "T" which will be 60 by. 30 leet. The basement for the structure will be used for a heating' plant and other utilities as well' as an incinerator for disposing of dis eased tissue and carcasses. This main building also houses an au topsy room which will accommo date any size 'animal. series- of.. ten isolation pens will be located in the animal wing at the rear, which will be 30 by 80 feet. Each of the 10 by 12 'feet isolation rooms will con tain an entrance and exit and be equipped with an observation window where research workers from Fishermen," and his latest, "How to Catch Fishermen." Zern is perhaps best known for his cartoon ads in sportsmen's magazines for Nash automobiles, in which he has caught the im agination the American public isn't supposed to have. Sent 500 Cartoons John Morris Price Was the an onymous founder of a column for the Daily Collegian entitled "Old P7M 3 , TwaY . Irt) can observe 'conditions without entering the room. A small dressing alcove will be included. in each isolation room where workers will change clothes before entering the room itself to prevent the-transfer of disease organisms. These pens, designed to meet specific conditions that could be envised with different diseases, will be patterned along modern units constructed recently in other states and will be equal ly adapted for use with poultry, swine, sheep, or cattle. Two laboratories, planned near the office, have been designated for pathology work and virology and bacteriological studies. Walter H. Wiegand, director of the department of physical plant, is working with the School of Agt riculture administrators in plan ning the new unit, with a view to making it meet the needs of the entire livestock and poultry industry. Draft Test Applications Available in . Old Main Applications for the Selective Service exemption examinations will be available in the Dean of Men's office, 109 Old Main, until March 9.. The next examination will.. be given April 23 in 121 Sparks. • Students who could not attend the last examination may take this one. Mania" during the school year 1931-32, according to Ridge Riley, alumni secretary. Price's first commercially pub lished cartoon was accepted by the Saturday Evening Post while Price was still at Penn State. He had sent in about 500 'cartoons to various magazines by that..titne. Since then, his cartoons* have been published in the New York er, Saturday Evening Post, Es quire, Colliers, and others. Alter graduation, Price went to -New York where he lived for a time in a $3-a-week attic room. He later declared, "It had one attraction. I could crawl out the trap door onto the roof and loOk across a beautiful garden to Kath.: erine Hepburn's balcony." Cartoon Collection Available "But the real thrill came a few• years later, when, after having moved to slightly roomier quar ters, I read in the papers that Greta Garbo had bought the house and had remodeled the attic into her private studio for painting pictures. To think •of Garbo in my little den, wanting to be alone!" Price's first collection .of his cartoons is entitled "Don't Get Polite with Me." Price offers to autograph a copy for any Penn Stater who mails $1 with ten cents postage to ' Price Enterprises, Riverside, Conn.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers