PAGE TWO Book Sales More money was returned to students who sold books through the Book Exchange this year than last year, Franklin Kelly, chair man of the Book Exchange board of control, said Thursday night. In presenting his report to All- College Cabinet, Kelly said that $8499.87 was returned to students this year, and $1182.38 last year. The difference, $7317.49, repre sents the increase in use of the BX. The figures represent those for the spring semester 1952 and the spring semester 1953. During the sales for the spring semester this year, 4522 books were handled, while last year only 1390 were handled. Gross sales for the spring semester this year amounted to $9287.95, roughly $5BOO more than the $3426.30 in sales for the fall semester this year. Preliminaries Of Ag Contest To Be Monday Preliminaries for the first Paul R. Guldin Agriculture Speaking Contest will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in 109 Agriculture. Twenty-five agriculture under graduates will present five min ute speeches. Approximately five entries will be selected to com pete in the finals at 8 p.m. Tues day in 117 Dairy. Eight to ten minute speeches will be deliv ered. r Judges for the contest will be Dr. Russell B. Dickerson, vice dean of the School of Agricul ture; Dr. Earl M. Kesler, assistant professor of dairy husbandry; and Joseph F. O’Brien, professor of public speaking. First and second place winners will be announced at the Ag Hill Achievement Day at 7 p.m. Wed nesday in Schwab Auditorium. The speech contests and the Achievement Day program hon oring outstanding leaders in agri culture activities will be open to the public. ■ First prize consists of $5O and a gold medal. Second prize will be $25 and a silver medal. The awards, to be presented annually, have been provided by a memor ial fund established by Mrs. Paul R. Guldin. 3 to Compete In State Finals Three high school students who won eastern, central and western district titles, will compete in the state finals of the annual Ameri can Legion High School Oratori cal contest, to be held at 10 a.m. Monday in Schwab Auditorium. President Milton S. Eisenhow er will preside at the program. Joseph F. O’Brien, professor of public speaking and chairman of the local committee on arrange ments, will speak. 1 Winner of the competition will receive a four-year scholarship that may be used at the College, Pitt, Penn, or Temple, and he will have a chance to compete for the national title. Construction Bid Opening Delayed ‘ Opening of construction bids for the concrete block Animal Disease Research Center has been postponed until today,' Walter H. Wiegand, director of physical plant, has announced. The bids were originally to be opened at 3 p.m. yesterday. In addition to a $lOO,OOO ap propriation made by the General Assembly, the legislature gave $37,500, matching a similar amount presented by the Penn sylvania Poultry Federation at the Pennsylvania Farm Show in January. Prepare for an Executive Career in RETAILING - in just One Year! From New York to New Zealand, college graduates con verge on "The Retailing Center" to train for an exciting, rewarding career—in just one year! Retailers need you —and look to our graduate school—for future advertising managers, buyers, merchandise managers, fashion execu tives, store managers, personnel administrators.researchers. Prominent retailers send their sons and daughters to the N.Y.U. 'School of Retailing to help carry on the family buiness successfully. Our one-year Master's Degree pro gram includes courses in all branches of retail-store man agement, under well-known specialists, plus 10 full weeks of supervised executive training, with pay, in leading New York stores, plus valuable store and market contracts. For details , write for BULLETIN CJ NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RETAILING 100 Wa-lunnim Square East New York .3, New York Exchange Increase Women to Wear Dinks '» Kelly said that the bank bal ance for the BX as of March 15 was $1561.23 with all bills paid. The balance for March 31, 1952 was $111.89. Cabinet passed a move that will require incoming freshman wo men to wear green dinks and name cards instead of the ribbons and name cards required this year and in the past. James Schulte, chair man of . the Freshman Customs Board, made the request for the change. Suggests Discarding RILW William Griffith, chairman of the Religion-in-Life Week com mittee, requested and received ap proval of a three-member religion committee to work with the Inter- Religious Council. Those named to the committee "are Irene Tay lor, Edgar Fehnel, and Helen Sid man. Griffith in his report to cabi net urged that work be started sooner, on Religion-imLife Week so that more widely known speak ers can be obtained. He also rec ommended that the committee he named look into the possibilities of discarding the idea of RILW and substituting instead a Catho lic, a Jewish, and a Protestant emphasis week. Robert Smoot was named Na tional Student Association repre sentative to the regional conven tion at the Pennsylvania College for Women in Pittsburgh. Applications Due For WD Awards Applications for awards in ath letics, scholarship, and activities to graduating seniors in the West Dorm area must be submitted by noon tomorrow, Hugh Cline, West Dorm Council, awards committee chairman, has announced; Nominations for the awards must be made by letter, not neces sarily by the applicant, stating his semester, activities, curricu lum, and campus address, Cline said. One person may submit more than one nomination. A committee of administration and students will select the re cipients of the awardsj to be made at the West Dorm Council ban quet May 5. Letters should be addressed to Cline, box 780 Irvin Hall, campus. 'Music of the Nations' A program of Jewish music will be presented on “Music of the Nations,” a radio program spon sored by the department of ro mance languages, 8:30 p.m. Mon day over WMAJ. Joseph Berger, fifth semester science major, of Hillel Foundation, will narrate the program. TEE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Musicians Set Concert Tomorrow The annual combined concert staged by Phi Mu Alpha, men’s music fraternity, and the Louise Homer Club, women’s music hon orary, will be presented" at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. The program will feature, both light and classical selections pre sented by various vocal and in strumental groups. No admission charge will be made. Numbers on the concert pro gram will include Four Psalm Se tings (Schutz) sung by the mixed Phi Mu Alpha - Louise Homer Club chorus; La "Fiesta (Guentzel) and Fantasia On the Mountain Top (Barnhouse) by the brass sex tet; and Duo No. 1 for Oboe and Bassoon (Beethoven) by the woodwind duo. The Mello-Aires vocal quar tet will sing Mr. Moon, Climbin’ Up the Mountain, How Deep is the Ocean, and Limburger Sand wich. A piano duo will perform Rondo Capriccioso (Mendelssohn) and Carolyn Morris, contralto, will sing Music for a While (Bur cell), Kom Susser Tod (Bach), and Der Ring (Schumann). Concluding the concert the Phi Mu Alpha dance band will play All the Things You Are, I’ll Re member April, Zing Goes the Strings of My Heart, and Fifty Miles Per Hour. Rating Tests Sent to Profs In LA School Copies of the faculty-evaluation test and letters of explanation have been delivered to the in structors of the liberal arts school) Richard Kirschner, chairman of the evaluation committee, has an nounced. The evaluation, which is spon sored by the Liberal Arts Stu dent Council, is to be purely on a voluntary basis. The letter ex plains that the evaluation is to be administered at the discretion of the instructor. The council suggests that the instructor give out the evaluation sheets to his class 20 minutes be fore the end of the period and then leave the room. An appointed student should collect the sheets, place them in an envelope and deliver it to the instructor’s mail box. The evaluations should be examined by no one except the instructor. After examining the sheets, the instructor will then dispose of them. Any instructor interested in ad ministering the evaluation should indicate on the council’s letter the number of evaluation forms he needs and give the letter to the department secretary. Want to travel and study abroad? Visit the countries of your choice . . . study from 2 to 6 weeks at a foreign university. You can do both on one trip when you arrange a uni versity-sponsored tour via TWA. Itineraries include countries in Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Africa. Special Study tours available. Law all-inclusive prices with TWA’s economical Sky Tourist service. For information; write: John H. Furbay, Ph. D., Director, Air World Tours, Dept. CN, 80 East 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Be sure to men tion countries you wish to visit. Tak« a university-sponsored tour via TWA this summer and’earn full, college credit while you travel TWA rtLMMt WOAtO AtAUMtS Students Named Ag Dean's List 96 To Ninety-six students have been named to the fall semester dean’s list in the School of Agriculture, according to Dean Lyman Jackson. Twelve students in the school finished the semester with a 3.0 average. Seniors: George Alleman, 2.6; David Anderson, 2.84: Michael Babco, 2.85; Kur vin Batdorf, 2.83; Robert Bealer, 3.0; Wal ter Beers, 2.58; Nancy Bigley, 2.6; Mary Bollinger, 2.72; Donald Bucks, 2.76; John Burrell, 2.68; Joseph Campbell, 2.85; Fred erick Coe, 2.53: Jasper Deener, 2.5 ; Nel son Folsom, 2.72; Earl Grissinger, 2.81; James T. Hall, 3.0: James Harpster, 2.7 ; Carl Herald, 2.87; Richard Holdren, 2.52; Frederick Horsman,. 2.63; Lewis Hutchi son, 2.5: Edward Kramer, 2.77; Lowell Lewis, 2.66; Robert P. Lewis, 3.0; Law rence Lindstrom, 2.73; Ralph Mauger, 3.0. Charles Mohler, 2.56 ; Lewis Montgomery, 2.56; Lawrence Myers Jr., .2.75; Walter Fitzonka, 2.75; Claude Reich, 2.61; John Risser, 2.62; Thomas Schmalzried, 2.58; Morris Schroeder, 2.52: Charles Shearer, 2.5; Guy Temple, 2.6; Donald Waddington, 2.5; Marvin Weidner, 2.66; Edward Wen ner, 2.55; Bernard Wingert, 2.83; Richard Wright, 2.83. Juniors: Elizabeth Alberigi, 2.52; Barry Anthony, 2.76; Nfed L. Clark, 2.6; Marion Cullen, 3.0; Samuel Curtis, 3.0; Samuel Dyke, 2.88; Edgar Fehnel, 2.62; Peter Fenchak, 2.78; Bernard Fox, 3.0; Samuel Hayes, 2.59; Duane Holm, 2.9; Leon John son, 2.5; Dean Knavel, 3.0; Kay L. Lang, 2.52; Daniel Loucks, 2.'7; Robert McCarthy, 2.85; Nancy E. May, 2.52; Howard Nick low, 2.56; Charles Holder, 2.81; Wayne Otto, 2.66; Jane Oyermeyer, 2.72; Thomas F. Owens, 2.61; Daniel Pettinato, 3.0: Ste ven Fetz, 2.63; Jeanne Riddle, 2.5; David E. Schmidt, ' 2.81; Clark Sell, 2.6; Mark Shaw, 2.76; John Shelly, 3.0; William Sopper, 3.0; Carl Swartz, 2.78; Alfred Swinick, 2.65; Charles Telfer, 2,61. Sophomores: John R. Allison, 2.69; Jeanne Bertholf, 2.5; Arthur Brooder, 2.53 ; Jack Denniston, 2.55: Shirley Eagley, 2.6; George Flicltinger, 2.59; Richard Foster, 2.74 ; John Gallagher, 2.5; Samuel C. Smith, 2.91 ; Gerald vanZyverden, 3.0: Richard C. Weaver, 2.7 : Mary Yandow, 2.63. Freshmen: Henry Berger, 2.54; Donald Campbell, 2.73 : John Eberhardt, 2.91; Louis Galliker 111, 2.64; Edward Glass, 2.94; David Morrow, 2.75 ; Van .Roxbrough, 2.61; Daniel VanDuyne, 2.61; Richard William mee, 2.64; Walter Wurster, 2.82. FFA to Hear Martinez Reinaldo Martinez, former teacher at the Puerto Rico Land Grant College, will speak to the Future Farmers of America on “Vocational Agriculture in Puer to Rico” at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 100 Horticulture. CPC Appoints Three Three members of the Cabinet Projects Council have been ap pointed administrative assistants to President John Laubach. They are Sally Eisen, Priscilla Judge, and Pegge Shierson. }*§& PLASTIC ‘‘FRIGID BOX”! Both-only *1.69 AT YOUR BREYER DEALER’S The "Frigid Box" is an ideal container for storing and serving the Breyers Ice Cream Half Gallon. Also for general refrigerator use. SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1953 April 15 Set As Fulbright Form Deadline Another story on page jour Applications for post-doctoral Fulbright awards for university lecturing and advanced research in certain countries must be filed prior to April 15, Robert H. Gal braith, Fulbright adviser, said to day. While many of the 1954-55 pro grams will not be announced un til June, the programs for the fol lowing countries require imme diate action in filing applications, Galbraith said: Germany and Finland, Septem ber 1953 to June 1954; Australia, February to December 1954; Bur ma and Ceylon, June 1954 to March 1955; India, July 1954 to April 1955; New Zealand, March to December 1954; Philippine Is lands, June 1954 to April 1955; Thailand, May 1954 to April 1955; and Union of South Africa, Feb ruary to December 1954. Application forms must be ob-. tained from the Conference Board of Associated Research Councils, Committee on International Ex change of Persons, 2101 Constitu tion avenue, Washington 25, D.C. Detailed information is available in booklets now in the offices of the deans of the schools and at the office of the Fulbright adviser, 243 Sparks. Livestock Show Today A fitting and showing demon stration to acquaint participants in the annual Little International Livestock Show' with procedures .used in preparing an animal for show will be held at 2 p.m. today in the" Livestock Judging Pavil ion. HALF GALLON and a beautiful crystal-dear ( Regular price
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers