Untlif dxiltpjjt&tt ■ ph Ssst VOL. 54, No. 50 Art Display Viewed 'fcH ? ' —Photo by Bretts FERNANDO'RODRIGUEZ, fourth semester petroleum and natural gas engineering major, and lola Ragino, third semester geography major, study a painting in the faculty art exhibit on display in Mineral Industries Building. Staff Work The first faculty group art exhibit at the University opened yes terday in the Mineral Industries art gallery and will continue through Dec. 12.' ' : The 60 pictures in the exhibit represent the work of 17 . artists from the University and the Altoona and Ogontz Centers. Sponsored by the Department of Architecture,.. the Division.. of Fine and Applied Arts, and the Division of Art Education, the show includes large oils, small watercolors, pastels, drawings, and one three-dimensional construc tio n. The pictorial expression varies from realism to the non objective. Faculty Training The training of the faculty members exhibiting paintings in cludes ■ study in art schools and universities and some have studied with famous artists. They are architects, painters, and art teachers. Some have exhibited in national shows. Represented in the exhibit from the Department of Architecture are Milton S. Osborne, F. Cuth bert Salmon, Phillip F. Hallock, and M. Robert DesMarais. From the Division, of Fine and Applied Arts are Andrew W. Case, Harold E. Dickson, John Y. Roy, George S. Zoretich, and Eleanor Zygler. Victor Lowenfeld, Sybil D. Emer son, Edward L. Mattil, Kenneth Beittel, Yar G. Chomicky, and Mary H. Filer are from the De partment of Art Education. Ed win W. Zoller is from Altoona and Floyd Gahman, Ogontz. To Be Open Daily- According to Harold E. Dickson, professor of fine, arts, catalogs listing the pictures will be avail able in the gallery within a few days. He expressed the hope that this exhibit would be the first of a series of annual shows of the same kind. The gallery will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, including Saturday and Sunday. Ag January Grads To Order Gowns Seniors in the School of Agri culture who will graduate in Jan uary may sign up for their caps and gowns today at the Athletic Store. Seniors in education and engineering may order tomorrow and Thursday 1 . Deposit for the caps and gowns is $5. Invitations and announce ments may be ordered on the same days at the Student Union desk .in Old. Main. Students who will graduate in military uniforms need not . order caps and gowns. l+ X ■* .jfe.:- - v ; Exhibit Shows of 17 Artists Two to Keporf To Tribunal Tribunal will hear reports of conduct of two students on pro bation at 7 tonight. The students, one of whom was placed on Tribunal probation for participation in a West Dorm dis turbance, and the other, charged with disorderly conduct in Belle fonte after a high school fbotball game, were told they must report to Tribunal at its first meeting of each month. No new cases will be heard to night, Thomas Farrell, Tribunal chairman, has announced. IFC Newsletter The Interfraternity Council Newsletter will not be published this semester, Thomas Schott, IFC president, announced yester day. Lodge Charges 38,000 Persons Victims of'Wholesale Brutality' STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 1, 1953 v\ :4*' i * ; * x * > '** v* ' ; f <4S-'--/'\ *• f UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Nov. 30 (IP) Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. charged today that 38,000 UN soldiers and Korean . civilians were victims of a con scious policy of “wholesale bru tality” laid down by world communism. He said most of the victims died. The chief American dele gate charged before the Gen eral Assembly that Russian of ficers headed the command of prison camps in North Korea in which thousands of prison ers of war were slain by in human and atrocious means. Most of the Assembly dele gates sat in shocked silence as the 'chief . American delegate opened the debate on the ques tion of atrocities which the United States raised a month ago. Proposals Introduced Lodge introduced a resolu tion proposing that the As sembly: • • . 1. Express “its. grave concern FOR A BETTER PENN STATE WDFM to Begin Trial Broadcasts Radio station WDFM will, begin practice broadcasts tonight with a series of. “dry runs” which are scheduled to continue until actual broadcasts begin. The dry runs are designed to acquaint experience announcers, technicians, directors, staff writers, and all other personnel with the broadcasts. The procedure followed and pro grams will be the same as the actual broadcasts except that there will be no transmission. Greyhound Bus Strike Postponed 4 ' Students went home by Grey hound bus as scheduled last Wed nesday when some 2000 drivers and maintenance employees post poned their walkout which had been set for midnight Tuesday until Friday. The strike date is still tenta tively set, but D. W. Maxey, local manager for the Greyhound Bus Lines, said he feels the strike will be averted. Reports indicate the union and representatives of the line are near agreement on the demands of the workers, he said. Tension was high last week be fore the Thanksgiving recess as the campus discussed the possi bility of the work stoppage leav ing many students stranded at the University. Many voiced hopes that school would be dismissed a day eairly to enable students to catch last buses out, but the or der did not come. Greyhound officials urged stu dents to leave early as they des cribed the strike situation at that time as “grim.” No report is avail able yet as to how many students cut Wednesday classes on this advice. Maxey said over 800 students used Greyhound facilities in their journeys home for the vacation, and four of the five scheduled special buses were filled. He add ed, however, that usually about 1500 use the buses. This loss in passengers, which Maxey termed as light consider ing the severity of the situation, was probably due to students finding other means of transpor tation, he explained. Some re funds were given but the students were very, cooperative, he said. 400 New Students Approximately 400 new stu dents, including freshmen and transfers, will enter the Univer sity at the beginning of the spring semester, C. O. Williams, dean of admissions, announced yesterday. at reports and information that North Korean and Chinese Communist forces have, in a large number of instances, em ployed inhuman practices against the heroic soldiers of forces under the United Na tions Command in Korea and against the civilian population of Korea,-” 2. Condemn “the commission by any, governments or author ities of minder, mutilation, tor ture, and other military person nel or civilian population, as a violation of rules of inter national law and basic stand ards of 'conduct and morality and as affronting human-rights and dignity and worth of the human person.” . U.S. Has Support Britain, France, Australia and Turkey, all with soldiers in Korea, joined the United States in presenting this reso lution. The sponsors did not ask for a commission of investigation, According to Doris Berkowitz, station manager, a complete pro gram schedule has been drawn up and will be used on these broad casts. Scripts submitted by staff writers, announcements, and news from Daily Collegian writers are among the material to be used. The listening survey conducted by the staff of WDFM four weeks ago has aided the station in pro gramming the schedule for the dry run broadcasts. The pool was taken to serve as a guide for sta tion programming by determin ing the students’ preference in types and times of programming. Open With 'News The; trial broadcasts will • open with a news and sports summary and wind up broadcasting with news headlines. Campus news, weather and gazette for the con venience of the students are in cluded in the daily schedule. Musical presentations are scheduled for the majority of the station’s time. The Seque Session, uninterupted popular music' with little comment by the announcer, is planned for popular music lov ers. The Dancing Party includes popular music' designed especially for dancing. Record Prevue is a program of the latest popular mus ic and broadcast requests. The Hamburger Stand rounds out the popular music schedule. Music to Aid Students Music for Studying, recorded semi-, and light-classical music for easy listening, is intended to aid students while they are study ing. Symphony Hall, Masterworks Hour, Masterworks from France, Sunday Symphony, and Hi Fi Open House include classical re cordings. Semi-Fops is a program of light classical music while Ballet Thea tre is made up of recorded ballet music. Paris Star ’’’ime and Show time include popular show music. Marquee Memories, Chorale, Ev ensong and Organ Recital, and Music of Many . Lands round out the musical presentations. Features Dramatic Programs BBC World Theatre and BBC Feature, European dramatic pre sentations, and The Third Pro gram, featuring drama, poetry, literature, etc., are included in the station’s drama schedule. The Bob Crosby Program, in (Continued on page eight) assuming it would be stopped by the Bamboo Curtain. Ameri can representatives also said they were certain that the evi dence produced by the United States Department of Defense proved the case beyond dis pute. Lodge said barbarities com mitted on prisoners of war in a long death march northward from Pyongyang “suggest eith er sadism on a mass scale or, what is more likely, vengeful hatred and brutality resulting from the enemy’s .indoctrin ation of his forces.” Political Motives Seen He said the battle atrocities appeared to have been colored by a political motive. Lodge gave his grim recital of terror and horror from Ko rea as representatives of Ger many, Italy and Japan de manded in the social commit tee that the Soviet Union report on the fate of tens of thousands of their nationals captured in the Second World War. University OKs Action Of Tribunal Recommendations of Tribunal for deferred suspension for a sec ond semester pre-med major found guilty of underage drinking and conduct detrimental to the good name of the University have been accepted by the Senate Com mittee on Student Affairs sub committee on discipline. The student had also been found negligent in his responsibility for the conduct of himself and his date. The girl had been found un conscious from drinking, follow ing the Junior Prom Nov, 6. Deferred suspension means that the student is suspended from the University, but that action is de ferred until the end of the se mester when the dean of men will decide if the decision is to be effected or not. The social chairman, an eighth semester senior of Theta Xi frat ternity, was placed on disciplinary probation until the end of the se mester in other action of the dis ciplinary committee. The student had been found guilty of supply ing alcoholic beverages to the fraternity. Disciplinary probation means that the case will be placed on the student’s permanent record, and the student will not be per mitted to participate actively in extra-curricular activity, or hold office. The case arose from an investi gation by the Dean of Men’s of fice and the Interfraternity Coun cil board of control of Theta Xi following the Junior Prom. The investigation led; to a 14-week suspension of social privileges of the fraternity for serving alco holic beverages and permitting a freshman woman at an unchap eroned social function, a viola tion of the IFC unchaperoned dat ing code. A third disciplinary case in volved a first semester freshman caught tampering with a fire ex tinguisher in the Nittany Dorm area. The student was placed on disciplinary probation for the rest of the year by the committee. The misdemeanor was cited as a vio lation of both state and federal laws. Bus School Mixer Set for Thursday The student-faculty mixer spon sored by the School of Business Student Council will be held from 7:15 to 9:45 p.m. Thursday in the Temporary Union Building. Dale Clemens and his Paragons will play for the affair. Richard Fav r o, co-chairman, said that the mixer was planned to better relations with the stu dents and faculty and to provide an understanding of the workings of the Student Council. College Union Group To Meet at University Thirteen colleges and universi ties have been invited to the fifth annual third region conference of . the Association of College Unions this week in McKee Hall. Inform al workshops, student govern ment, and student unions will b® ‘ discussed. FIVE CENTS
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