TUESDAY. OCTOBER 4. 1955 Centennial Activities... Round-Table Talks Set for Convocation Forty-pne students, along with visiljing educational ex perts, Alumni, citizens, of the local community Will partfk|gft& inrounWtablediscussionsrit the Centennial be held October 21 and 22. . The highlighting, the; Centennial activities of the follow the theme seleCted by the University —' Student Committee— “ Penn • State Through the Next 100 Yews/ 1 ThC educational problems of a land grant institution in the fu ture will be discussed at the in formal discussions. They will fol low the theme “The Future of American Higher Education, with Special Reference to the Chang ing Responsibilities and Poten tialities of the Land-Grant Con cept of Education.”' Three Groups Planned The round-tables are divided into three groups: resident in struction, research, and exten sion. There will be three round tables for each of the groups. Twenty people have been invited to take part in each group. The purpose of the convocation and its round-table discussions includes an exchange and devel opment of ideas from which it is hoped will be derived some pos sible solutions that may be of value to other land-grant univer sities as well as the University. Reports to be Published The addresses and reports de veloped from the roundtable dis cussions will be published. Students included in the round table discussions on resident in struction are George Black; Mrs. Helen E. Buchanan, graduate stu dent; Miss Margaret Fagan, grad uate student; Myron Feinsilber; Donald Ford, graduate student; Louis Fryman; Clarice Garrett, graduate student; Miss Judith Hartman; Darwin Hostetter; Miss Lynn Hough; Mrs. Mary L. Leslie; Bruce Lieske;, Rudolph Lutter; "David Morrow; Charles Pennell; Louise Richards, graduate stu dent; and Donald Swegan, grad uate student. Extension Round-Table • ConcertSerles 2 Groups In Series Announced The Philharmonic Piano Quar tet and the Virtuoso di Roma are two of the groups which will com pose the Community Concert Series this year. David H. McKinley, chairman of the Community : Concert Asso ciation in State College,' told the membership solicitors at a meet ing last night that the local com mittee engaged these tw v o per formances early in the year so that it would be possible to in clude them on the 1955-56 series. Scheduled for Oct. 22 i The Philharmonic Piano Quar tet will appear Oct. 22. The Vir tuoso di Roma concert will be given later in the year. The other two or three pro grams will be arranged after the close of the campaign, which is noon Saturday or earlier if the quota of 1230 memberships is sold before that time. On Sale in HUB Leland S. Rhodes, professor of civil engineering, is directing the campaign this year. Campaign headquarters are in the lobby of the Hetzel Union Building, Geor gia MacDonald, representative of the New York office of the Com munity Concert Series, will assist with the campaign and will aid in arranging the program after the drive ends. Stanley Michalski is director of the student campaign, assisted by William Mills, both of Phi. Mu Delta fraternity. Memberships are now available > at the head quartern or through the unit chairmen or volunteer workers on the campus and in the commun ity. Horn* Ec Council .to Meet The Home Economics Student Council will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Home Ec Living Center to discuss the fall semester program. West Hall Council to Meet West Hall Council will hold its first meeting of the semester at 7 tonight in McKee Lounge. Kdlin's Dress Shop State College - Penna. What: PERMA-UFT WEEK. , Where: KALIN'S DRESS SHOP When: Week of Oct. 3-8 Drawings Sat., Oct. 8, 5 p.m. How: Just Register. No Obligation to Buy! How Much: $5O in 10 Free door prizes Why: Because it happens so natur ally with Perma-Lift Girdles & Bras Kalin s Dress Shop THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Participating in the round-ta ble discussions on extension will be George Buckhout, Jr.; Patri cia Dickinson; Lawrence Gersh man; Robert. Krakoff; Harry Nelson; Warren Saunders; John, Seastone; Vernon Sones; Doro thy Stone; W. B. Swim, graduate student; Daniel Van Duyne; Don ald Watkins, graduate student; and Jean Yemm. Students who will take part in the discussions on research are Robert Belfit, graduate student; Miss Jane Cameron; Miss Caro lyn Cunningham; Charles Duris; Nelson Guild, graduate student; Larry Lock; Joseph Mazurkie wicz, graduate. student; James Parmiter;. Donald Reidenbaugh; Roberta Sankejr; and Marjorie Taylor. Dougherty Scheduled For Tonight The Very Reverend Monsignor John J. Dougherty, professor of sacred scripture at the Immacu late Conception Seminary, Dar lington, N.J., will deliver the fourth University Centennial lec ture on religion at 8 tonight in Schwab Auditorium. Monsignor Dougherty’s address will be on “Tradition and Pro gress in Catholic Bible Study.” The lecture is open to the public. A graduate of Seton Hall Uni versity, Monsignor Dougherty has spent most of his theological ca- Monsignor John J. Dougherty Centennial Lecturer reer teaching scripture at the Seminary at Darlington. In 1930 he was sent to the North Ameri can College in Rome where he was ordained into the priesthood. He studied theology at the Uni versity of the Propaganda and the Gregorian University and re ceived the Licentiate in Sacred Theology in 1934. In 1948 he was awarded the Doctorate of Sacred Scripture cum laude by the Pontificial Biblical Institute.. Mofisignor Dougherty has tak en part in many radio and tele vision programs, including the Catholic Hour, the Christian in Action, the Church of the Air, and Lamp Unto My Feet. Sales Tax— C Continued from p proposed by Gov. Leader, was de feated last summer on a partisan vote in the Senate after winning support of the House. The Re publicans control . the Senate, while the Democrats hold an edge in the House. The Faculty Luncheon Club will hear Dr. Mary L. Willard, professor of chemistry, speak on "Crime Through the Micro- I scope" at noon Monday. ' Claude Thornhill ...his piano and orchestra To Dance and Dream Make It a Must on Your Social Caldendar Junior Prom November 4 Semi-Formal $5.00 per couple oCive it up —lint big. lance of the gear ll Art Exhibition Lithograph To Start Thirty-three lithographs by Benton Spruance, well known Philadelphia painter and lithographer, will be on display at the Hetzel Union Building for about three weeks, beginning Saturday. This display, arranged by Francis ciate professor of fine arts, will open University’s Centennial loan ex hibition of “Pennsylvania Paint ers” which will be exhibited in the art gallery of the College of Mineral Industries. Spruance will be one of four speakers at a "Symposium on the Arts in Pennsylvania” to be held the opening day of the exhibition. Studied at U of P Born in Philadelphia, Spruance studied at the University of Penn sylvania’s School of Fine Arts. He has been the recipient of a Cres son Traveling Scholarship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Pre sently a professor of fine arts at Beaver College, Jenkintown, Spruance is a member of the Philadelphia Art Commission and of the Pennell Purchase Commit tee of the Library of Congress. Ten of the lithographs in the exhibition are new. Many have religious subjects and other por tray characters in Greek mythol ogy. Lithographs Listed The following lithographs will be on display: “Man in Limbo,” “Crown of Thorns,” “Return of the Hero,” “Early in the Morn ing,” “Two Angels,” “Easter An gel,” “Priestess, “Offering,” “Pa per Shapes,” “St. Francis in the Fields,” “St. Francis in the Piaz za,” “St. Francis in the Market,” J This Ad is Worth X Money to You! Come See the Bargains [ in Our Clothing Exchange! WS Cocktail Dresses from $2.00 Skirls from $1.25 $ Suits from $5.00 Slacks . from $2.00 Topcoats from $4.00 $ Men's Suits .... from $3.00 Tuxedos from $7.00 Sport Coats .... from $5.00 Topcoats from $6.00 £ Thrift House •r Antiques sOn BENNER PIKE Just north of Freeser Fresh between State College and Bellefonte Rec Hall Dancing 9 to 1 Display in HUB E. Hyslop, Jr., asso the same day as the “Fragment,” “Centaur I, The Saint,” “Centaur 111, Apotheosis,” “Centaur V, The Hero." “St. George,” “St. Gall,” “St. Jerome,” “St. Michael,” “Dancer,” “Dasdalus and Icarus,” “Clue to the Labyrinth," “Worship of the Minotaur,” “Promitheus,” and “Fallen Angel." th," Continental’’ »y - g Princess ■ Gardner Fashion news for handbag! ...the Continental! With leather lined change compartment, rayon bill* . _ pullout bill compartment, ▼ gold tone frame, 4-window w photo-card ease. Polished pirn rax cowhide, a bevy of colors. Stan Caliy.Pa. PAGE FIVt EES
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers