PAGE TWO Groups Will Receive Spring Week Details Letters with instructions concerning booths for’the Spring Carnival will be sent out this week end to .campus groups, according to Joan Lee, chairman of Spring Week committee. The carnival will run for two nights this year. Last year the carnival was held on only led for May 11 to May 16. Applications giving ideas for the booths at the carnival must be returned by April 1. The ap plications will be marked for the time and date they are received. Those received first will be given preference in the event of dupli cation of idea. one day. Spring Week is schedu! Scholarship Interview Reports Set Members of the Honor Society Council’s student committee in vestigating Scholarship at the College will report on interviews with school deans at 4:10 p.m. Monday in 241 Sparks. Ben Euwema, dean of the School of Liberal Arts; Dr. Fred Matson, professor of ceramics; Alan Davis, instructor of English composition; and Shirley Mus grave, vice president of the coun cil, will comment on the reports. The committee will present final reports of this semester’s research at the council’s May meeting. The study is being con ducted because of the interest shown in the topic when it was presented at the October meeting of the council. Members of the committee and the schools they represent are Thomas Schmalzreid, agriculture; Robert Euwema, chemistry and physics; Doris Cook, education; Eloise Grimm, home economics; Gifford Albright, engineering; Douglas Schoerke, liberal arts; Charles Smeltzer, mineral indus tries; Robert Kenyon, physical education; and Donna Carlson, all-College. Agnes McElwee is adviser of the committee. 1 Lowenberg to Speak Dr. Miriam L. Lowenberg, pro fessor and head of the Depart ment of Foods and Nutrition, will speak to the school lunch room institute of Somerset-C a m b r i a counties today in Johnstown. Dr. Lowenberg’s topic will be “The Psychological Aspects of Feeding School Children.” Cabinet Approves Soph Poverty Day All-College Cabinet Thursday passed a proposal designating Friday as “Poverty Day” for the sophomore class. The proposal was presented by sophomore class Vice President William Rother. The purpose of the day, Rol class dance that night, the Shan livestock Show Drawings Set , Drawings for horses, beef cat tle, and sheep to be shown in the annual Little International Live stock Show will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 109 Agriculture. Any student may participate in the show. A fitting and showing demonstration will be held in the Livestock Judging Pavilion March 21 to acquaint students with the procedures utilized in preparing an animal for show. The Little International will be held in the Livestock Judging Pa vilion in conjunction with the Ag Hill Open House April 25. Women to Draw Room Priorities Women students will draw numbers for priority in apply ing for rooms for next year from 8 a.m. to noon and 1:30 to 5 p.m. Monday in the Dean of Women's office, 105 Old Main. Formal application must be filed by noon today if coeds wish to retain their present rooms, Mrs. Cordelia L. Hibbs, assistant to the dean of women in charge of housing, has an nounced. Eight-week students will not draw numbers at this time. Notice of time and place to formally apply for rooms and priority numbers will be an nounced next week. The week, as outlined >by Miss Lee, calls for the He-Man contest preliminaries and the Miss Penn State coronation on May 11. On May 12 the carnival parade, Mad Hatters contests, and the final He-Man contest will be held. The Spring Carnival will be held May 13 and 14. On May 15 the Senior Ball will be held and on May 16 Delta Nu Alpha, transportation honorary, will schedule a project. The carnival will be situated in parking lot number 11. in back of the Sigma Chi fraternity house. The carnival, according to Miss Lee, will be “arranged differ ently” from last year’s carnival with the possible exception of having the ferris wheel in opera tion this year. The booth chairman for the carnival is Joseph Haines, eighth I semester industrial engineering major. His assistant is Richard Grossman, sixth semester com merce major. The parade chair man is George Richards, sixth semester commerce major, who is assisted by Nancy Hagy, sixth semester education major. Charles Gibbs, sixth semester commerce major, is chairman of the Mad Hatters contest. His assistant is Samuel. Nowell, eighth semester sanitary engineering major. The Miss Penn State coronation is under the direction of Nancy D. White, sixth semester home economics major, who is assisted by Richard Neuweiler, eighth semester arts and letters major. Joseph Barnett, - fourth semester' chemical engineering major, is in charge of special events. The bus iness manager is Franklin Kelly, eighth semester journalism major. Publicity chairman is Charles Obertance, sixth semester journ alism major. ther explained, is to preview the tytown Shuffle. He added that it would be a revival of an old Penn State custom- where students would dress in old-fashioned or hobo clothes. Several letters proposing an ex change of students were read to cabinet by All-College President John Laubach. One from City College in New York recommend ed an exchange of students with in the United States during their junior year, particularly Penn State with CCNY. The second was from the gov ernment of India stating it would pay traveling expenses for stu dents to and from India. These students, however, would be re quired to provide their own funds for tuition and other costs. Both letters were referred to com mittee' for consideration and re port at the next cabinet meeting. Members of the staff of next year’s Student Handbook were appointed by Laubach. They are Richard Rau, editor; Morton Zieve, business manager; Eliza Newell, managing editor; and Bruce Nichols, assistant business manager. Other staff members are Benjamin Lowenstein and Alexander Ayers. Thomas Schott was appointed to the cabinet leadership and training commit tee. Cabinet will recommend to a Senate member that .at the next Senate meeting he amend the present calendar proposal before that group.'The amendment would have Orientation Week start the Wednesday following Labor Day. Registration would start that Sat urday and continue until the next Wednesday; when Orientation Week would also end. Classes would then start that Thursday. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Director Named for Ml Station The appointment of Dr. John A. Hippie, chief of the atomic sec tion of the National Bureau of Standards, as director of the Min eral Industries Experiment Sta tion was announced Thursday by President Milton S. Eisenhower. Dr. Hippie will succeed Dr. Al fred W. Gauger, who retired Dec. 15. A native of Lancaster, the new director attended Franklin and Marshall College and Penn State and then did graduate work in physics at Princeton University. He received his Ph.D. there in 1937. In 1938 Dr. Hippie joined the staff of the > Westinghouse Re search Laboratory in Pittsburgh where he specialized in gaseous discharge problems. Nine years later Dr. Hippie joined the staff of the National Bureau of Standards, where he made major contributions to pres ent knowledge of atomic cons tants. His work there resulted in greater accuracy of the charge to-mass ratio 'of the proton and gyromagnetic ratio of the proton. Dr. Hippie represented the Bur eau of Standards at the Inter national Conference on Spectro scopy at Radio Frequencies held in Amsterdam in 1951. Dr. Hippie has been a consult ant to the Research and Develop ment Board and several military research laboratories. He is a member of the editorial board of the Review of Scientific Instru ments, the National Research Council committee on a ; 't o m-i c constants,'American Physical So ciety, Sigma Xi, Sigma Pi Sigma, and the Washington Academy of Science. Hanartia Gets Vets Club Post Joseph Hanania, fourth semes ter arts and letters major, was elected parliamentarian of the Penn State Veterans Club Mon day night. Membership, publicity and ad vertising, and social committees were also established at the sec ond meeting of the newly-estab lished club. Mathew Miller was appointed chairman of member ship, Robert Neiman of publicity and advertising, and William Mertz of the social committee. The establishing of other committees provided for in the constitution of the club was temporarily post poned. Durwood Rorie was appointed to the executive committee by President Andrew Korim. Riding Club Lists Committee Heads The Riding Club has named heads of committees, for the Penn State Horse Show to be held May 2-3. Chairmen are William Brodnax and Jean Lathlaen, show; Mari lyn Cameron, association secre tary; Margaret Powell, show sec retary; Michael Bassarik, show treasurer; Marion Whitmore and Patricia Gilbert, advertising and sponsorship. . John Zimmerman, outside course events; Richard Lyon, in side course events; Ruth King, programs and prizes; Nprma Coop er, tickets; Barry Fein, publicity; Nancy Wild, exhibitors; Thomas Ellis, grounds; and Bernard Ger ber, concessions. Forgery Suspension An eighth semester Liberal Arts student has been suspended for forgery by the College disciplin ary committee, not by Dean of Men Frank J. Simes, as reported. Niebuhr Will Speak In Chapel Tomorrow “Wisdom of Survival” will be the topic of Dr. H. Richard Niebuhr, dwight professor of theology and Christian ethics at Yale Divinity School, at Chapel, 11 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. Dr. Niebuhr will also lecture on “Christian Existentialism” at a public lecture, 8 p.m. tomorrow in 119 Osmond. One of the foremost theologians in the Western world, Dr. Niebuhr has been a. faculty member of the Yale Divinity School since- 1931. He is an ordained minister in the Evangelical and Reformed Church. Graduated from Elmhurst College in 1912, he holds degrees from Eden Theological Seminary, Wash ington University, Yale Divinity School, and Yale University. Dr. Niebuhr received the hon orary degree of Doctor of Divinity froni Eden Theological Seminary. He has also studied at Union Theological Seminary, the Uni versity of Berlin and the Univer sity of Tubingen. Prior to holding his present po sition at Yale, Dr. Niebuhr was president of Elmhurst College, Illinois and professor in the Eden Theological Seminary, Missouri. He has also held pastorates at St. Louis, Missouri and Clinton, Conn. He is the author of “The Mean ing of Revelation,” “The Social Sources of Denominationalism,” “The Kingdom of God in Amer ica,” and “Christ and Culture.” The Chapel Choir will sing as Anthem “Hear My Supplication” (Arkhangelsky). . • George • Ceiga, organist, will play as Prelude “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring” (Bach), as Offer tory “Lo, ’Ere a Rose is Bloom ing” (Brahms), and as Postlude “Cgnzona Tos t i 1 Communio” (Frescobaldi). Coeds to See Plays Staged Alice Doles and Anne Bullock, eighth semester arts and letters majors, will leave Monday to see their prize-winning plays pro duced Tuesday night at the an nual arts festival of the Women’s College of North Carolina 1 . Miss Doles’ one-act comedy “Tempest in a Testtube” and “The. Shattered Crystal,” a character study by Miss Bullock, were se lected as outstanding plays in the contest sponsored by the Play likers Society of Greensboro, N.C. Warren S-. Smith, associate pro fessor of dramatics, will accom pany the coeds to North Carolina. Leaves Given 3 Profs Three faculty members,, have been given leaves of absence. They are: Edward F. Ormsby, in structor in mathematics; Roger Roberg, instructor in accounting; and Edgar L. Van Cott Jr., in structor in engineering mechanics. VI jhjMfTo Bujiukt .. Am. “A secure future, exceptional opportunities for advancement, and a high starting salary await you at Fairchild, if yon 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 m our long-range military program; turning out the famous C-119 for the U. S. Air Fo'rces. . “Fairchild provides paid vacations and liberal health and life insurance coverage. We work a 5-day, 40-hour week.. “If you feel you are one of. the men we. are looking for, write me. Your inquiry will be held in strictest confidence. * Walter Tydon, 'widely known aviation engineer and aircraft designer and veteran of 25 years in aviation, is Chief Engineer of Fairchild*» Aircraft Division. p imik *» niwimit eofroMTioii ' (WSr FAIRCHILD y/ima/tPmUm SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1953 Yale Professor Will Lecture On Theology Dr. H. Richard Niebuhr, dwight professor of theology and Chris tian ethics at Yale University Di vinity School, will give the first of a series of faculty lectures at 8 p.m. tomorrow in 119 Osmond. Dr. Niebuhr’s subject w.ill be “Christian Existentialism.” The lectures, inaugurated this year, are sponsored by a faculty committee headed by Dr. Harold K. Schilling, dean of the Gradu ate School. They are open to the public. Dr. Niebuhr and his brother, Reinhold, are accredited as two of the most provocative theologi cal thinkers and writers in Amer ica today. The Niebuhrian theol ogy has done much to shape theo logical thinking in th. e United States. The are also widely acclaimed in the Orient and Europe. Other members' of the sponsor ing committee are Warren S. Smith, associate professor of dra matics; Dr. Samuel W.' Blizzard, associate professor of sociology and rural sociology; Dr. Ralph W. Condee, assistant professor of English literature; Dr. Henry S. Brunner, professor and head of the Department .of Agricultural Education; Dr. Robert B. Patrick, associate professor of education. Dr. Robert K. Murray, assistant professor of history; Dr. Hummel Fishburn, professor and head of the Departments of Music and Music Education; Dr. Mary Jane Wyland, professor, emerita of ed ucation-'and program coordinator of the Penn-State Christian As sociation; and the Rev. Luther H. Harshbarger, chaplain of the Col lege and general secretary of the Christian Association. Walker to Talk Monday Dr. Erie A. Walker, dean of the School of Engineering, will speak on “Nuclear Energy” at the meet ing of the Faculty Luncheon Club at noon Monday at the Hotel State College. Euwema Will Speak Ben Euwema, dean of the Lib eral Arts school, will address, stu dents enrolled in Engineering 3 at 4:10 p.m. Monday in 110 Elec trical Engineering. HAGERSTOWN, MARYLAND
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