er 4500 Arrive Today 0 . 4 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. SUNDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 8. 1957 - FIVE CENTS VOL. 58. No. 1 eason Selections Rate any Gridders High Pre Nit I o the football:Mid-Western category due to Look, rates the Lions 10th in the .nn State's 1957I"those years when the Paniherslnation and second in the East finish amon ;were the favorite sparring partner:behind Navy. Cohane predicts g lof the Big Ten." only a loss to Pitt will mar the •teams in the With this reservation, Abram- iNittany schedule. lest cases, among son writes: "The choice'here fort Francis Wallace, one of the Ip. 20 teams. the Eastern champion will be original pigskin prognosticators, expert have cast Tenn State. Rip Engle's Nittany !credits Penn- State with a 7-2 - on Coach Rip Lions, picking up from their tielseason, rating the Lions third in en for the forth- with Pitt, have their all-sop the:East in his article for Playboy more backfield of last year intact . . ." Harold Classen, Assistant Sports Editor of the Associated Press, writes in his forecast: "If you want to follow the Eastern college with the best team, rivet pour attention on the' Pittsburgh Panthers. If you want to follow the team with the best won-lost record: Penn State is the choice . . . Penn State concentrates on Eastern rivals whom it is ex pected to dominate." Other predictions run son-re thing like this: Real magazine rates the Lions 23rd in the na tion and fourth in East behind Pitt, Navy, Army - and Syracuse. Tim Cohane, Sports Editor of According forecasters, P. grid squad w the top thre: East and, in m the nation's t• Expert after rave after ray Engle's grid ele Bruce Gilmore . . a halfback star coming season. Only one expert rates the Lions lower than third in the East—a few favor them over Pitt's" Panthers, a ' team ex lieted to. have another power house this year. At any rate, the preseason dopesters all feel that Engle's squad will.be heard from in 1957: Comment runs something like -this: Jesse Abramson of the New York Herald Tribune picks the Nittany Lions as kingpins of the Eastern independents. However, Abramson said that this was on ly because Pitt is rated in the University to Give Asiatic Flu Shots The University Health Service has beenable to 'obtain a limited supplS , of Asiatic flu vaccine for students. In order to prevent an epidemic on campus this fall and early winter, Dr. Herbert R. Glenn, - director, has urged stu dents to receive innoculations. Shots are of the Univer available at the ,dispensary in the west wing -ily Hospital. They are expected to cost about Although •Health Servic - cine, Dr. Glen U.S. Surge "if the present have as many 66,000 deaths." Inly a limited supply is now. available, the hopes to receive further shipments of the vac said. In-General Leroy E,Burney has warned that attack and mortality rate continues, we could as 33 million people ill, with approximately vaccine, about 70 per cent effective, is the ' The new only preventi l Dr. Glenn ; from the shots site of injectis "kiiptie-like eral,rrialaise la c' oi. • -g from the Orie Said most students will not•have any reaction texcept for a slight redness and soreness at the in. Howefer, some . others, he said, may have espoiise" with some fever, headache and gen ting 2:4 to 48 hours. - . using all the commotion •in this country is an !nisin imported throtigh unavoidable . means eared more than a - . ear ago, and has spread I-- every country in the Eastern Hemisphere as It -first ap■ through almos well asluropi Elaitg FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Merchants Plan 'Welcome Days' More than $750 worth of mer chandise will be given away by State College merchants this week to climax a 3-day program designed to acquaint new students with borough stores. - The "Welcome Days" program is sponsored by the retail division of the State College Area Cham ber of Commerce. More -than - 35 local stores are expected to participate. A corn: plete list of participating stores is printed on pages 12 and 13 of today's paper. All students must do to be eli gible for prizes is register at any of the participating stores. Toilrgiatt Most Tests Gone With the Division of Counsel- 1 ing doing most of the testing: over the summer months, thus' taking most of the_ tests out -ou Orientation Week, the Univer ity, has come up with a varied counseling program. Talks by the- deans of the col-1 leges, lectures by University pro fessors, dances, a fun night, sing ing, and counseling by students are included in the new program. President Eric A. Walker will welcome new students in a speech at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow in Recrea tion Hall. All-University Presi dent Robert Steele will addreas ;the new students on behalf of :the. student body. Activities Exposition Planned - One of the many new events Hof the week is an Activities Ex- 1 !position to be held Thursday in the Hetzel Union ballroom. Stu dents can learn about the dif iferent extra-curricular activities ;at this time. I As the new students begin their, orientation program, about 9000 Les Walters !upperclassmen will be arriving ... tops among the ends'on campus, preparing to register' magazine. He rates the Lions asl Wednesday through Saturday. 14th in the nation. In addition to the estimated And so it goes. Forecaster afterll3,soo who will enroll on campus, about 3000 undergraduates will forecaster credit - the Lions with be registered at centers through high preseason ratings. But ail lOut the state. the student body, Penn State fans and experts alike can do is tot 1606 Frosh at Centers follow Engle's policy—wait and:i This group at the centers will see. nclude about 1600 freshmen, ;about half of them enrolling for a 4-year program and the other Reception Planned fora 2-year associate degree h alf s , rogram. For - Alumni Kin I Exact enrollment figures, in icluding breakdown of men and The Alumni Association will:women students, will flot be hold an informal reception fromavailable until after registration 1 to 5 p.m. today in its office, 1041 is completed. Old Main, for new students who However, total enrollment is are sons and daughters of alumni.lestimated at about 16,500. Some 300 incoming freshmen; .an_d_ their parents and guests arei Next Issue Wednesday 'expected to attend the reception.; The next issue of The Daily President Eric A. Walker is ex-i Collegian will appear Wednesday. ;petted-to head the list of adminis-!Rnother Orientation Week issue trative officials attending." ;is scheduled for Friday. while About 200 freshman are sons:daily publication will begin with and daughters of alumni. tthe Sept_ 17 issue. President Welcomes New Students President Eric A. Walker has written the following welcoming message for new students: President Lowell of Harvard once remarked that it is small !wonder that there is so much knowledge in a university: the freshmen bring so much and the seniors take so little away. I will not debate whether or not this is true, but it could be true. We do not insist that you take any with you , when you leave: We do try• to insist that you achieve something before you get a degree. The most important differ ence between your life here and your life in high school is your increased freedom. You have a wider choice of curricula and. courses. You make your own choice as to how, when or whether 'you study. Your eve nings are usually*your own, and usually you have no one to proc tor or chaperone you. No one will urge you to suc ceed. You are free to pass .or to fail, to win - or to lose, to flunk out or to make a success of your col lege career. The University is note a jail and a professor is not a! policeman. ' The Rib . of the faculty and ad- Record 3400 Enroll In Freshman Class More than 4500 new students; a record number, will ar rive on campus today to begin Orientation Week. Among these will be an estimated 3400 freshmen, the largest class ever to enroll at the University. This is about 700 more than in last year's freshman class. Transfer students from Univer sity centers will number approxi mately 1100. With the number of new stu dents increasing annually, the University has given the Orien tation Week a "new look." It's no longer a week of two hour tests, but has been designed more for actual orientation. How ever, most students will have so le tests. ministration is to help you: to help you with your selection of courses, to help you master the subject matter, to help you Frosh Class Orientation Schedule Set A full week of tests, mixers and talks begins. today for 4500 freshmen and transfer students. The evening and weekend schedule for Orientation Week follows: Today 8 a.m.-5 p.m.—Open house at Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. 7-9 p.m.—Open houses and mix ers by Hillel Foundation at 224 Locust La..' Newman Club at Our Lady. of Victory Church social hall. University Christian Associ ation (by invitation) at faculty homes and Christian Science Or ganization at 104 Chapel. 10 p.m.—Transfer women: hall unit meetings. Tomorrow '6:30 p.m.—All new women: Uni versity songs at Schwab Audi torium (bring Student Handbook). 7 p.m.—All men: talks by.stu dent counselors at designated places. 7:45 p.m.—All new students: addresses by President Eric A. Walker and president of Student Government Association at -Rec reation Hall: 9:15 p.m.—Freshman women: counseling in hall units. 10 p.M.—Transfer wom e n: counseling in hall units; men liv ing in Nittany 22. 23, 25, 27, 29. 32, 33, 37. 38, 41). 41 and 43; resi dence hall meetings. • Tuesday 6:30 p.m.—All women: WRA, talk at Schwab Auditorium, fol lowed by WRA open house at White Hall; all men: talks by student counselors at designated places. 8 p.m.—All new students: talks on college student councils, at (Continued on page two) Dinks for Frosh to Go ! On Sale Today at BX The traditional blue and white dinks for freshmen will be on sale beginning at II a.m. today at the Book Exchange, in the basement of the Hetzel Union Building. Freshmen must wear the clinks for custon\s, which ,will begin next Monday. learn how to wonder and to think. The job of the University is tc provide the proper sur roundings and atmosphere in which to think. Beyond that we can do little. This is your new freedom and your new responsibility. Be grown up men and women andccept it. Good luck to all of you. Walker's Inaugural Scheduled Oct. 3 Dr. Walker will be inaugurated as the University's 12th president Oct. 3, about one year after assum ing the office. The program will include the inaugural ceremony to be held at 11 a.m. in Recreation Hair and a reception and luncheon_ at 12:30 p.m. in the Hetzel Union Building. Formal invitations have been sent to more than 6GO guests, in cluding student leaders. Repre• sentatives of the state govern ment, industry, mining. agricul ture, research groups and colleges and other universities I,vll - alga attend. The inaugural ceremony in Rec reation Hall will be open to stu— idents. faculty, and townspeople.