1 BETTER PENN STATE ; VOL. 53, No. 80 'State' Band To Repeat Concert at 8 - A" repeat performance of its public concert will be given by the Western All-State High School Hand under Guest Con ductor Paul Yoder, arranger and composer of music for band, at 8 tonight in Schwab, Auditorium. - Tickets for the concert priced at $l, are on sale at the. Student Union desk in Old Main. The concert will bring to a close the three-day high school band festival which drew approx imately 75 directors and 185 band members to State College from 180 -schools throughout -Western Pennsylvania. State College High School has acted as host for the affair. Tonight’s program will be a duplicate of that given at last night’s concert. The program will - include “Marcho Poco (Moore), a concert march; “The Sicilian Ves pers” (Verdi) arranged by Saf ranek; “If Thou Be Near” (Bach) arranged by Moelhmann; “Diver timento for Band” (Persichetti); “Lady of Spain” (Evans) arranged by Cailliet; “The Liberty Bell March” (Sousa); and. -“Dunedin” (Alford), a march. Also “An American Weekend” (Marrissey), composed of four harts: “Picnic Outing,” “Evening < Stroll,” “Concert in the- Park,” and “Stepping Out;” “River Jor dan” (Whitney), a fantasy on Ne gro spirituals; “The Hot Canary” (Nero) arranged by Walters; se lections from “South Paci f i c” (Rodgers) arranged' by Leidzen; and “Rainbow Division” (Nirel la), a march. “Three-Kings,” a comet trio by Smith will be performed by three members of- the Penn State Con cert Blue Band, John Leister, Roger Staub, and Alan Wyand. Dairy Group Makes Plans For Exposition Plans for. the annjial Dairy Ex position and! banquet to be held May .9 were made at a Dairy Sci ence Club meeting Thursday night. Drawing of cows and equip ment will be March .26. The. first showing and fitting demonstra tion will be April 9 and the sec ond demonstration, including .washing and clipping, will be April 29. ’ The dairy cattle judging con test. will .be May 2. The contest includes professional and amateur divisions and will be open to stu dents. Final practice for the show will be May 5. Arthur Stone is show manager, and Harry Roth is his assistant. Breeding managers include Fred Ost, Holstein; William. Crawford, Guernsey; .'Boyd Wolff, Jersey; David Dunbar, Ayrshire; and An drew Marehchick, Brown Swiss.. Committees for the show in clude publicity James Hall, chairman; Guy Johnson, Levis Phipps, Helen Joyner;, banquet— John . Sarikianos, chairman; Gil bert Hess, Robert. Rugaber; queen contest - Robert Jensen, chair man;, Jeanne Bertholf, Johnson. Decorations Calvin Sammons, chairman;. James Oliver, James Hallock; special e v eil t S' — Roth; judging contest—Crawford, chair man; Boyd Wolff; and show an nouncers— John Zug and Edgar Fehner. TODAY'S WEATHER CLOUDY RAINY With All-College Cabinet’s final approval of a 20-cent a semester raise in student - fees, indications are that the proposed campus radio station will go into operation on a $7OOO yearly budget. In addition, the College has indicated that supplemental funds, above -their anti cipated share of $3OOO, will be- put- into the station if they are available. - Chapel to Have Virginia Dean For Speaker r ' - ' i Dr; Samuel D. Proctor, dean of the School of Religion of Virginia Union University, Richmond, will speak on “What the Potter Does With Spoiled Clay” at Chapel ser vices 11 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. Dr. Proctor, a native of Norfolk, received his A.B. from Virginia Union University and his B.D. from Crozer Theological Semin ary. Dr. Proctor studied at Yale University Graduate School and later received his Ph.D from Bos ton-University. Before taking his present position, he was pastor of the. Pond Street Baptist Church in Providence, R.I. • The Chapel Choir will sing as introit 'Rise My Soul” (Nares) and as anthem ■ “Hymn of Grati tude” (Haydn) .- George v Ceiga; . organist, will play as prelude “Sheep May Safely Graze” (Bach), as offer tory “Adagio” (Guilmant), and as postlude “Exultate” (Kreckel). lyse Discusses Macßae Case STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 7, 1953 DeMarino Resigns Post In Dean of Men's Office Station Wilt Operate On $7OOO Budget The 20-cent fee, scheduled to be added to student fees begin ning this fall, is five cents above the original 15-cent hike sought. The additional five cents was approved to facilitate expansion lof the number of radio receivers lin downtown living units. The assessment will be presented to | the College Board of Trustees for [final approval when that group meets March 27. No information as to when sta tion construction would begin or when ..construction might be fin ished was available.- Application must be made to the Federal Communications Commission for permission to'' begin construction, tests must be run, then applica tion for license wiil be made. . Plans to make this year’s Re ligion-in-Life-Week program more practical were announced to cab inet by William Griffith, chair man of the RIL.W committee. Present-day practical problems would be discussed, he said— many concerning the campus. . The constitution of the Board, of Publications, submitted by Chairman David Pellnitz, was given unanimous approval by cabinet. One amendment provid ing that a faculty adviser be selected by the Senate, was pre sented by Pellnitz and accepted. Terry Taylor' was appointed ex ecutive-secretary to the. cabinet Projects Council. Patricia Hath away, David Jones, and David Pellnitz were appointed to serve as the, student members on the communications committee. Dr. Samuel D.' Pxocidr To Speak at Chapel A discussion of the Wendell Instead the act requires , the Byse agrees generally with the S. Macßae loyalty case at the endorsement of employees by finding of the second Macßae College was included in the ar- their department heads, Byse hearing, that, of a seven-man tide by Professor Clark Byse of said. This certification proce- faculty committee, though- he the University of - Pennsylvania dure is a “sensible method of disagrees with “several por for • the January issue of the complying with-the Act and at- tions” of the report. Uof P Law Review; the : same time not infringing However, Byse took .issue with Byse’s article, criticizing .the- academic freedom,” he said. certain portions -'of Harrison’s state loyalty act—The Fechan “But at the Pennsylvania State report. Act—as being “more harmful to College these considerations . The change in rules for the loyal Americans ; than to. dan- either were not advanced or Macßae hearing was called gerous subversives,” was cited in were thought to be of insuffi- “thoroughly undesirable, and not yesterday’s Daily Collegian. • cient weight,” Byse said. .required by. the Loyalty Act” by The Pechan Act did not intend Byse declared that the board ’Byse. He criticized some , points that .st a t e-aided institutions which first heard Macßae’s case, in the College’s procedures as (such as Penn State) should re- “unquestionably should have compared to those at the Uni quire loyalty, oaths of their em- found that Mr. Macßae was, not versity of Pennsylvania, the ployes, Byse wrote. And it does subversive.” This board failed to University, of.- Pittsburgh, and not.insist that they fill, out ques- appraise the evidence properly, Temple University. - Byse des tionaires, Byse added, noting Byse said, and they failed to cribed some parts of the law “a that such papers were; “as ob- make the thorough investiga- threat ,to educational .freedom, jectionable as the oath requird- tions required by the regula- . and! independence in the Com ment” : ; tions. ! monwealth.” < „ FOR A Penn to Offer Scholarships Students planning to enter the University of Pennsylvania Law School next fall are eligible for approximately 30 scholarships un der the law school’s national scholarship program. The exact number available will be deter mined by the amounts of the awards. A number of scholarships carry stipends for sustenance which, in very, special cases, may be as much as $lOOO a year, in addition to. full tuition. The majority of the awards. will- cover full tui tion, and a few will provide for half. tuition. Daniel A. DeMarino To Retire March 1 Voice Sound Sets Speakers To Stuttering Long-winded lecturers to the contrary, speakers are apparently frightened by the sound of their own voices. Dr. Robert S. Brubaker, assist ant professor of speech, reports that when a speaker using a mi crophone hears his own words reverberating through the room a fraction of a second after he has uttered them, he may lose con trol of his speaking and begin .to stutter. This phenomena, called delayed auditory feedback by the speech professor, was the subject of a detailed study. In his study students wearing ear phones were allowed to hear their words just after they, had spoken and while they were utter ing another word. The speakers invariably stuttered or showed some other speech disorder, Dr. Brubaker said. Dr. Brubaker believes the test results may help to find the caus es and possibly new methods to correct stuttering. In his experiments the speech scientist noted that women speak ers usually stuttered less than men. Perhaps women’s ears are less sensitive to sound because their hair is longer, he offers in ex planation. Or maybe, he. adds, women just don’t listen to what they are saying.' Jam Session at TUB Mike Rosenthal and- his Or chestra will play at a jam session scheduled for 2:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Temporary Union Build ing. The concert will feature bop and dance music, Assistant Dean To Take Job With Alcoa Assistant Dean of Men Dan iel A. DeMarino revealed yes terday he has submitted his resignation from his present position with the College ef fective March 1. He announced he is leaving Penn State, after serving as as sistant dean for one year prior to World War II and seven years since, to go into personnel work with the Aluminum Company of America. He believes there are “great possibilities for an ener getic person in industry” and that he “would like to explore them” In going into industry, DeMa rino severs a relationship with the College that has existed as both an undergraduate and grad uate student, an instructor, a coach, and as a supervisor of un der graduates. Instructor, Coach' Dean DeMarino, who was bora in Greensburg, graduated with a. B.S. degree in physical education in 1938 and received his masters in 1941. During the interval he was associated with the School «">f Physical Education and Ath-. leiics and served as assistant line coach of the football team .and as fre=hmarrboxing monitor. He also was head counselor for the Tri-Dorm area while an in structor and coach and there veloped an interest in the prob lems of the student. In 1941 he was named to his present- post-' tion as assistant dean of men wi der former Dean Arthur H. War nock. . ' His duties were interrupted -In 1942 by a four-year tour of duty as a lieutenant in the Navy. He then returned to the College and worked under Dean Warn o e k again, former Dean Harold K. Wilson, and the present dean,". Frank J. Simes. Worked With Coffee Hour His many achievements at the- College included organizing' the Windcrest settlement and intro ducing its present system of bor ough type government, advising the Independent Men’s Associa tion prior .to the war, drafting constitutions for the Nittany and Pollock areas, and organizing, the present dormitory counselor sys tem. Always a supporter of student government, he has contributed to the dean of men’s coffee hour and the dean’s student advisory committee. ' , . After two months at Alcoa’s Pittsburgh mills, Dean DeMarino, his wife and two children, Danny 7, and Delmar, 5, will move to the Messena, N.Y., plant, which spe cializes in smelting and fabrica tion. He will be in the personnel department. (Continued on -page eight) String Quartet To Give Recital - The Amadeus String Quartet will appear in the second of three concerts sponsored by the State College Choral Society at 8 p.hi.. Monday in the State College School Auditorium. The quartet is a British group making its first American tour. *' Organized in 1947, the quartet has given concerts in Europe and. has appeared in music festivals* m Britain and Holland. Tickets, at $4.50, can be ob tained in the high school audi-" torium before the concert. The ticket includes the March 5 con--' cert, which will.feature the Bu dapest String Quartet FIVE CENTS
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