The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 14, 1953, Image 2
PAGE TWO Official Envelope Lists Times for Registration Registration • must be made for the spring semester at the time designated on the official registration envelope, H. A. Sperber, assist ant scheduling officer, has reminded students. To be admitted, students must present matriculation cards at the north exit to Recreation Hall, opposite the Nittany Lion Inn. Seniors and juniors will regis ter Jan. 28, sophomores and fresh men Jan. 29 and 30, and special students Jan. 31. • Students should return to cam pus 24 hours bef or e they are scheduled to report to Rec Hall in order ;to see their advisers and pick up and fill out forms in the registration envelope, Sper b e r said. Students in the Division of Intermediate Registration should report to their advisers 48 hours before they are scheduled to re port to Rec Hall. Special students and College employees will register before noon Jan. 31. Necessary forms for registration can be obtained at 4 Willard, Sperber said. • Graduate students may register anytime between Jan. 28 and noon Jan. 31. Any student registering after noon Jan. 31 will be charged a $lO late registration fee. Students should keep an up-to date schedule handy at all times during registration, Dean of Ad missions C. 0. Williams has an nounced. This will be the only copy of the schedule students will possess on completion of registra tion. In case major changes in the schedule are necessary, students should report to the • dean's rep resentatives in the middle of the Rec Hall floor. Students will not be permitted to leave Rec Hall until registration has been com pleted, Williams said. • Registration booths Will be set up according to schools in the same places as last semester, Sper ber said. A map of the Rec Hall floor is printed on the registration envelope. Sophs Consider Spring Revival Of Poverty Day The sophomore class last night discussed the possibility of re viving Poverty Day, an old Penn State custom popular during the twenties. Although no decision was made on that proposal last night, the class did choose "poverty" as the theme for its dance March 20 and postponed further discussion of Poverty Day until its next meet ing. The title of the dance will be chosen by the decoration com mittee from a list of five' sub mitted by the class last night. Committee chairmen for the affair are William Rother, dance chairman; Lu Weber and Ronald Safier, decorations; Albert Ben ning, tickets; John Speer and John Kelly, intermission; Barry Kay, requisitions; Tom Kidd, mu sic; Richard Bouchet, publicity; and Faith Gallagher, posters. The class talent show to be held March 18 will consist of a Barbershop Quartet contest, su pervised by John Kelly. • Admission to the dance in Rec reation Hall will be free to soph omores and their dates. State Police Called To Probe Theft State police will be called in to investigate the theft of two alu minum cylinder heads valued at $5O from an automobile belonging to William Bieber, first semester mechanical engineering major. Capt. Philip Mark of the Cam pus Patrol yesterday revealed he would call in the State Police to check on fingerprints taken from the vehicle. The cylinder heads were stolen yesterday between 1 and 8 a.m. Additional damage estimated be tween $3O and $4O was done to the car, Bieber said. • Group to See Film "Human Bridge," an industrial film on human relations from the library of the Ford Motor Co., xvill be shown at the Society for th e Advanceire;lt of Manage ment meeting at 7 tonight in 107 Main Engineering. TM DAILY COLLEGIAIq, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Eng Council Open House Set for May, The Engineering Student Coun cil last night at its last meeting of the semester voted to hold its an nual open house in conjunction with the other schogls of the Col lege. The event is to be held the first weekend in May. Each engineer ing• department will be asked by the council to prepare exhibits and cooperate in presenting the program. Also, due to the many com plaints regarding the English pro ficiency test, the council accepted a suggestion of the administra tion that one night before the test be set aside for briefing of those taking the test in the aims and purposes of the test. The complaints had originated in the claim that there was no di rect preparation given 'for the test, and that the course given after the test to those failing did not give the necessary specialized instruction engineers need. The budget for the year was also presented to the council by treasurer Frank Leader and ap proved. Nearly twice the funds of last year were provided. Much of the increase will go to the ,open house program. Council keys were presented to each of the members at the' close of the meeting. Staff Members To Be Judges In Farm Show Many of the judges of the com petitive exhibits at the Pennsyl vania Farm Show in Harrisburg this week are members of the College staff. Carroll S. Shaffner, superinten dent of sheep, will judge sheep and wool; P. Thomas Ziegler, pro fessor of animal husbandry, will place the dressed lamb carcasses; and Dr. J. Frank Cone, professor of bacteriology, will judge milk. Other judges will be Dr. Glenn 0. Bressler, professor of poultry husbandry, eggs; Dr. Arthur J. G. Maw, professor of poultry hus bandry, baby chicks and poultry; Paul H. Margolf, professor of poul t r y husbandry, poultry, dressed turkeys, and broiler, fry er, and roasting chickens; Miss Myrtle E. Swanson, associate pro fessor of foods and nutrition, foods; Arthur W. Clyde, professor of agricultural engineering, and Frank Anthony, instructor in ag ricultural education, tractor driv ing contest. Barlett to Close Lecture Series Dr. Paul D. Bartlett of Harvard University will close the organic chemistry lecture series with three speeches today and tomorrow in Osmond Laboratory. He will speak at 4:10 p.m. today in 117 Osmond on "Cage Ring Systems and Organic Reaction Mechanisms." This evening he will discuss "Recent Develop ments in the Carbonium lon Theory" at' 7:30 p.m. in 119 Os mond. His lecture at 4:10 p.ni. tomorrow in 117 Osmond will be "Some Reactions of Elemental Sulfur with Compounds." Ag Group Hears Prexy President Milton S. Eisenhower addressed the 35th annual meet ing of the Centre County Agri cultural Extension Association Jan. 8 at Logan Hall. He discussed the history of national agricul tural extension programs and out lined major agriculture problems of the next ten years. King of Gods Desires Mortal In Players' Amphitryon 38' A four-level stylized set will en able the king of the gods, while standing on a cloud, to see and desire a warrior's mortal wife in the Players' production of "Am phitryon 38" at 8 p.m. tomorrow through Saturday at Sc hw a b Auditorium. Tickets for S. N. Behrman's liberal translation of Jean Girau doux's comedy are available at the Student Union desk in Old Main at 60 cents for .tomorrow night and $1 for Friday and Sat urday nights. Origirtal Set Realistic The set was designed by Rus sel Whaley and executed by Mes rop Kesdekian, instructor in dra mati c s, with the aid of the construction crew 'and• dramatics classes. The stylized set differs from the set used for the original 1937 production which starred the Lunts . and featured Sydney Greenstreet, according to Dennis Sherk, graduate assistant in dra matics and director of the Players' production. While the original production used three sets in an attempt for realism, only the properties will be changed for each act in the unrealistic, stylized set. • Biography' Presented The coloring through lights and paints is obviously unrealistic in its attempt to approach an as thetic feeling. The basic Greek costumes have also been stylized and dyed and painted to fit in the general effect. Another Behrman comedy, "Bi ography," was presented by Play- High School Bondsmen To Convene for Festival Band members from approximately 180 high schools throughout Western Pennsylvania will convene in State College Feb. 4 through Feb. 7 for four days of practice and concerts at the western division All-State Band Festival. Paul Yoder, arranger and publisher of school band music, will be guest conductor for the Western All-State Band. Yoder has had over 600 compositions published in 50 catalogs of music publishers.. The band will be composed of 185 selected musicians from schools throughout the western division. Only one musician may represent each -school with the exception of State College High School, which as host will place five in the band. The 185 band sters will be selected from over 355 high schools at district band meetings held this month. Sixty high schools from the central district, of which State College High School is a member, will • meet this weekend in Mar tinsburg. Selection of musicians from the central district to play in the Western All-State Band will be made by band directors Sunday at the Nittany Lion Inn. In addition to band members approximately 100 high school band directors will attend the Wrestling Show Tonight at TUB "Know Your Wrestling," a pro gram of information and enter tainment pertaining to the mat sport, will be presented at 7:30 tonight in the TUB. The program is sponsored by Blue Key, junior men's hat society. Members of the varsity wrest ling team will demonstrate basic wrestling holds and scoring tech niques. Movies of last year's East ern Intercollegiate championships will be shown. Nittany wrestling Coach Charles Speidel will nar rate the films. The program is open to stu dents and townspeople, and no admission will be charged. Thespian Officers Thespians recently re-elected Richard Brugger, president; Don-: ald Stohl, secretary; and Alan McChesney, treasurer. Newly-elected officers are Ray Barr, vice president; Clifford Hol gate, historian; and Lincoln War rell, member-at-large. se: g , p... vraum wnen Players present their new production, "Amphitryon 38." The S. N. Behr man liberal translation of the Greek legend will also be staged Friday and Saturday. ers last spring at Center Stage with Fran Stridinger in the Ina Claire role of Marian Froge. Besides "Amphitryon 38," the Lunts have appeared, in two other Behrman plays, "The Second Man," and "I Know My Love." Other Behrman hits include "No Time for Comedy," "End of Sum- Western All-State Band Festival in February. Franklin Hege, director of the local high school band, will act as host director for the affair. The visiting band members will take over Schwab Auditorium from 8:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. on each of the festival days. Concerts will be given by the band on "Feb. 6 and 7 at 8 p.m. in Schwab. Tickets for the concerts, priced at $l, may be purchased at the Student Un ion desk in Old Main. In addition to the two concerts and hours of practice the band members will tour the Campus of the College Feb. 7. - nute4 10444‘5t iw,ttt;a`P~wie,l A secure future, exceptional opportunities for advancement, and a- high starting salary await you all FAIRCHILD, if you are one of the men we are looking for. We have openings right now for qualified engineers and designers in all phases of aircraft manufacturing; we need top-notch men to help us in our long-range military program: turning out the famous C-119 Flying Boxcar and other projects for the U. S. Air Force. FAIRCHILD provides paid vacations and liberal health and life insurance coverage. W.e work a 5-day, 40-hour week as a base. Premium is paid when longer work week is scheduled. FI ENGINE ANO AIRPLANE CORPORATION it --. AI RCH ILD AnagDiukrion, WEDNESDAY, JANTIARY 14, 1953 mer," "Jane," "Brief Moment," and "Rain from Heaven." Giraudoux's "The Madwoman of Chaillot" and "The Enchanted" have been well-r ecei v e d on Broadway. Before coming to the College, Sherk was director of theater at Kansas State Teachers College. Orientation Set For Jan. 27-31 ' Spring semester Orientation Week for new freshman an d transfer students will .be Jan. 27 to Jan. 31, Wilmer E. Kenworthy, chairman of the Orientation Week committee, has announced. Orientation will begin with lunch Jan. 27, followed in the afternoon by talks with faculty advisers, Kenworthy sai d. All men will then meet with orienta tion counselors according to the schools, he said. Members of the Orientation Week committee will serve as counselors. At 8 p.m., President Milton S. Eisenhower will'address the new students in Schwab Auditorium. , New students will register with returning students according to alphabetical division Jan. 28, 29, and 30. Health examinations will be given Jan. 30. The dean of •women will meet with new women students in. Atherton lounge at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 27. HAGERSTOWN. MARYLAND