WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1956 4 Students Will Enter State Reading Festival Four students will represent the University in the eighth annual Pennsylvania Intercollegiate Reading Festival tomor row and Friday at the University. The students are Gerald Denisof, junior in arts and letters from Philadelphia; Joanne Montgomery, senior in arts and letters from State College; John Muntone, junior in education Ag Council To Sponsor 13 Teams Thirteen clubs in the College of Agriculture signed up last night to participate in a softball league sponsored by the Agricul ture Student Council. The clubs participating are the Block and Bridle, Dairy Science, two teams from the Forestry Club, Hort Club, Rod and Coccus, Ag Eng, Future Farmers of Amer ica, 4-H, Ag Ec, Clover, Pre-Vet Club, and the Liebig Chemical Society. Faculty Evaluation Darwin Braund, chairman of the committee of faculty evalu ation, reported that from 33 re plies received from faculty mem bers, 67 percent believed they benefited from the program, and 12 percent said they received no benefit from the evaluation. A motion was made and second ed stating that the next evalu ation should be put off until the spring semester of 1957. This motion was amended to provide that those faculty members who were not evaluated last semester would be evaluated this spring. The motion was passed by a majority of the Council. A motion was also passed to de lay the collection of books for Silliman University in the Philip pines until next fall,' Bowling League A motion was passed to appoint a committee to investigate the possibility of forming a bowling league in the Ag Student Council. Warren Carmichael, editor of the Ag Hill Breeze, proposed an amendment to the constitution giving both the Penn State Farm er•and the Breeze a voting repre sentative on Council instead of just one vote between the two publications. It was moved and seconded to postpone Carmichael's motion indefinitely. The next meeting of the Coun cil will be held at 7 p.m., May 8, in 213 Hetzel Union. Gagarin Will Speak Captain Gregory A. Gagarin, assistant professor of physical ed ucation and riding instructor, will speak to the Riding Club at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 217 Willard. New officers will be elected. Collegian Candidates The Daily Collegian editorial candidates will meet at 7 tonight in 1 Carnegie. from Shanandoah; and Jon Wil der, freshman in arts and letters from Scranton. Representatives from 13 col leges and universities will parti cipate in three events of the fes tival—prose, poetry, and drama. Registration and a coffee hour will open the festival Thursday. The first reading hour, which will be poetry, will start at 2 p.m. in the reading room of the Hetzel Union Building. Denisof and Wil der will represent the University reacting "Aria Da Capo" by Edna St. Vincent Malay. Miss Mont gomery is chairman of this divi sion. Doyle lo Speak Esther M. Doyle, assistant pro fessor of English at Juniata Col lege, will speak at the festival banquet Thursday night. Patricia Doll, junior in arts and letters from York, will be mistress of ceremonies. Howard Slagle, junior in arts and letters from York, will be chairman of the evening reading hour at 8 p.m. in the Mineral Sci ence auditorium. Miss Montgom ery and Muntone will present a duo reading from Mark Twain's "Diaries of Adam and Eve." Phoebe Felk, sophomore in arts and letters, will be chairman of the prose reading hour at 10 a.m. Friday - in the Mineral Science auditorium. The University will not be represented in this divi sion. Final Reading at 1:30 The final reading section, on drama, will be held at 1:30 p.m. in the Mineral Science auditor ium. Denisof and Wilder will give Amphitryan 38 by S. N. Behrman from the "French of Jean Girau doux." The chairman will be Janet Klinghoffer, sophomore in education from Passaic, N.J. The festival, sponsored by the speech department, is under the direction of Harriet Nesbitt, as (Continued on page eight) Mother's Day Is Fast Approaching . Come to the CANDY CANE to select HER GIFT FROM OUR VARIOUS ASSORT MENT. Mail and Gift Wrap Service CANDY CANE Between the Movies CHECK hese Great Records ROUSEL (original sound track) NIC (music from the sound track) FAIR LADY (orig. Broadway cast) AST CONCERT (Hackett, Matlock, 2 OVERTURE (original score) RIS CONNOR (new, Great Chris) N WITH THE GOLDEN ARM (sound track) or the Greatest of Records Shop the Harmony Shop FIRST HARMONY SHOP So. Frazier St. pening Evenings Till 9:00 P.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Klein Wins Engineering Competition A paper by Gerald A. Klein. junior in electrical engineering from Bryn Athyn, has won first prize in a competition sponsored by the Pittsburgh section of the American Society of Electrical Engineers and the electrical sec tion of the Engineer's Society of Western Pennsylvania. The paper is entitled "Elec tronic Trigger Circuits." Instead of using slides, Klein utilized a closed circuit televised system, handled by Lloyd Matter, junior in electrical engineering from State College, William Pohts, junior in electrical engi neering from Rossiter, and James Raleigh, junior in engineering sci ence from State College. Richard L. Sherwood, senior in electrical engineering from Oil City, was chairman of the compe tition. Entrants competed from West Virginia University, Uni versity of Pittsburgh, and Car negie Institute of Technology. Members of the electrical engi neering department who attended the meetings included Dr. Arthur H Waynick, Philip X. Rice, Clif ford B. Holt Jr., Albert B. Powell, Paul E. Shields, and Ralph E. Armington. Teagarten) A Campus-to-Career Case History "There's opportunity in a growing company" As an Engineer in the Transmission Section of Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, Richard M. Walsh plans for the future. "Our group's responsibility," says Dick, "is to see that we have sufficient facilities to handle present and future needs. Telephone usage is growing every year, and we-keep up with this growth by keeping ahead of it. "For instance, to meet the increasing demand for communication circuits in our area, we're adding 70,000 new chan nel miles this year alone, at a cost of $3,500,000. Laying new cable will give us 40,000 of those channel miles, and we'll get the other 30,000 through use of carrier equipment, which lets us send a Dick Walsh graduated in 1953 from the University of Delaware with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering. There are many interesting career opportunities in other Bell Telephone Companies, and in Bell Telephone Labora tories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer can give you more information about A Bell System Companies.. Newly elected officers of Delta Chi are Thomas Ulrich, president; John Flynn, vice pr esiden t; Wayne Uls h. sergeant-at-arms; William Hastings. housemanager; Robert Pray, rushing chairman; Morris Meyer, scholastic chair man; Robert Pray, social chair man; Joseph DeThomas, public relations; Wayne Ulsh, song lead er; Richard Dagle. editor; Emer son Kless, librarian; and William Hastings, athletic chairman. Delta Chi has initiated Robert Archibald. David Bucke, Donald Coons, George Cori. Richard D.%- gle, Roy Grube, William Hast ings, Ronald Lay, Walter Majka, Joseph Meredith, Morris Meyer, Theodore Miller, John O'Connor, Newt Ruffing, Paul Tholan, John Transue, Wayne Ulsh. New officers of Pi Sigma Up silon are Francis McHugh, presi dent; Thomas Massage, vice pres ident; Theodore Baer, secretary; Thomas Mulhern, treasurer; Wil , lie Thompson, housemanager; Ed ward McHigh, social chairman: Jam es Ristimaki, sergeant-at arms; James McCabe. chaplain; and Henry Bartol, historian. Officers of Theta Xi are Edward Huston, president; William Bush, vice president; Richard Kohler. treasurer; George Hawk, secre tary; Tames Miltenberger, social chairman; Glen Thierwechter, ca terer, and Edward Pollock, house manager. • Dick Walsh (right) discussing carrier equipment which will provide many additional long distance circuits out of Philadelphia. Co-eclit3 New officers of Alpha Kappa Alpha are Huan Walker. Basileus; Dahlia Johnson. Anti Basileus; Jeanne Ripley. Gran'imateus; San dra Cunningnam, Epistoleus and Tamiochus; Peggy Turner, dean of pledges; Dahlia Johnson, so cial chairman; Sandra Cunning ham, parliamentarian: and Peggy Turner, intramural chairman. The new officers of Phi Epsilon Pi are Larry Wolov, vice super ior and Harry Neuman. secretary. New officers of Phi Kappa Sig ma are Harold McKee. president; Leroy Toddes, v ice president; Robert Dahlberg, treasurer: John Molloy, secretary; Elmer Strauss. 'scholastic chairman; Richard Lindfors, social chairman; Wil liam Hutchison, public relations chairman; Charles Yarbrough. housemanager; and Gene Foster, pledgemaster. New officers of Pi Kappa Phi are Richard McKnight, archon; Charles Schooley. secretary; Wil liam Pantie. warden; Vincent Ca rocci. historian; David Nash, chaplain; Gerald Althouse, head of tribunal; Roger Armstrong. senior tribunal member; Edward McDowell, junior member of tri bunal; and Harry Holm, head of finance. Officers of Alpha Chi Omega pledge class are Mary Kamm ire. president; Lois Henderson, vice president; Arlene Kondor, secre tary; and Alice Beebe. treasurer. number of long distance calls on each pair of wires simultaneously. "Thus, though a cable might have only 300 pairs of wires, we can, with carrier, make it carry over 3000 telephone calls at one time. Using carrier equipment t.c k get extra circuits out of cable—which is expensive to make and lay—is an example of how we engineer to give high-grade service at the lowest possible cost. "Before I graduated from college I had interviews with twenty-eight companies. Out of all these I chose the telephone company because it had the most to offer in the way of interesting work, training and opportunity. This certainly turned out to be true. In a growing business your opportunities grow, too." PAGE FIVE Tst•phon• sps/•ns
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers