Today's R. • R. and 1 orecast: ooler VOL. 58. No alker Ike, Open Will Conf rence lip wight D. Eisen- Eric A. Walker, the University, President hover and president .o President's Con- will open th iechnical and Dis :arch for the Bene- Business at noon shington, D.C. . eral chairman of , also serves on an 1 ee with Ossian R. •an of the College ference on I tribution Res: fit of Small Monday in W Walker, ge the conferenc: action commi MacKenzie, d dministration and of Business Robert H. R - msey, professor of engineering r-.earch. The commi tee has been ap pointed to lau ch an "action pro gram" after the Washington con ference. To Assess Aids The conference, growing out of a recommendation by a Cabinet Committee on Small Business ap pointed last year by Eisenhower, will take up the task of assessing research and development aids available to small businesses through gov~•rnment departments state and private universities and other private agencies. Another task will be to recom mend measures for extending such aid to small firms over the whole range of management. The action committee has rec ommended the conference formu late a program under which small firms can avail themselves of the latest technological and manager ial knowledge in this area of rapid scientific progress. To Introduce Goodwin The conference will end Wed nesday, with W alk e r giving a summary of the findings. Walker on Saturday will intro duce H. Eugene Goodwin, new director of the School of Journal ism, to the - Pennsylvania News paper Publishers Association at the association's annual conven tion Saturday at Harrisburg. 500 Army TiCkets On Sale Monday About 500. tickets for - the Ar my football game will go on sale at 8 a.m. Monday at $4 each, with a limit of two per person. The tickets, primarily intend. ed for students' families are for locations in the east stands be tween the goal line and the 10- yard line. They will be sold on a first-come, first-serve basis. The Recreation Hall ticket of fice is open from B a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays. Choice tickets are still on sale for the University of Pennsyl vania game next Saturday at Philadel • hia. lanned_ ndidates ollegian will hold ty this afternoon interested in be orial staff candi- Party ForCa The Daily a Coke Pa for student - coming oil will be held from the Collegian city egie. The part 2 to 4 p.m. " room, 8 Car Students eed not be journ alism majo s nor must they have had •revious newspaper experience !to become candi dates. Senior Board members will conduct classes in news paper reporting and editing. The party' will offer students an opportu ity to talk with staffers an • to ask questions about writ •g for' Collegian. Dress will •e "casual." The first will be h e week. The flounced lat candidate meeting I d sometime next date will be an r. - o , llr Baitg P 4 Toll STATE COLLEGE. PA...SATURDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 21. 1957 —Daily Collegian photo by Don von Wolffradt RAINCOATS, and even boots, were the order of the day yester day, even if the third coed smugly is not wearing her regulation off-white-alligator-raincoat. BusAal Career Day Changed to March The Business Administration's annual Career Day has been postponed from November until March, because of dif ficulty in obtaining a major speaker. A committee from the council will meet soon with Ossian R. MacKenzie, dean of the College of Business Administration, to work out plans for contacting possible speakers.. Coeds to Hear Antes Discuss Informal Rush "Be natural and enjoy yourself while meeting different coeds," Grace Antes, president of Panhel lenic Council, will tell women in terested in rushing at 8 p.m. Mon day in 121 Sparks. Informal sorority rushing will begin before the meeting with open houses from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Monday. Others who will speak at the mass meeting for coeds interested [in sororities are Barbara Rifling, Panhel rush chairman; Pearl 0. IWeston, dean of women, and R. Mae Shultz, assistant dean of wo men. A second round of open houses will be held from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesday. Dress will be informal (Continued - on page five) Encam • ment Recommendation Campus Chest Goes Out of Existence By PAT EVANS (Fifth of a series) Campus Chest, created to save students from 'the unend ing procession of soliciters for charity, is no longer in exis tence. Student Encampment approved a recommendation to allow the annual drive "to die a natural death." Here is the recommenda tion passed by the Student Enter prise workshop: "Drop Campus Chest for the year and have All-University Cabinet reconsider it at the end of the year. The respective organ izations shall be notified of the discontinuance of Campus Chest." Robert Steele, All-University president, at Encampment sai d . he had not appointed a chair man for what would have been this year's drives - - FOR A BETTER PENN STATE The postponement was voted Wednesday by the council_ It was reported that speakers usually re quire about two months' advance notice. Possible speakers mentioned are Gen. Matthew B. Ridgeway; Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D.- Texas); George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO; Robert Ken nedy, a U.S. Senate committee counsel; Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R.-Maine); Claire Booth Luce, retired ambassador to Italy: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr—chief U.S. delegate to the UN; and Charles E. Wilson, retired secretary of defense. The purpose of "Career Day," sponsored by the council and stu dent organizations in -the College of Business Administration, is to explore the opportunities for ser vice in the major fields of com merce, industry, labor, trade and government and to learn from leaders of industry who have achieved high levels of responsi bility the qualities of character (Continued on page five) Steele said it had been the opin ion of Robert Gellman, last year's campaign chairman, that Campus Chest should be dropped, at least for the present. 'Another result of the Student Enterprise Workshop sessions was the following recommendation: "In view of the fact that this committee feels that Penn State needs a University Book Store, we recommend that Cabinet in-i vestigate this problem and go on I record one way or another to the Board of Trustees of the Univer-1 (city." Several recommendations were made to further the Central Pro motion'Agency in the eyes of the student body: •There be regularly scheduled office hours so that contacts with CPA can be made more easily for advertising. •The people to contact can be listed on the , CPA bulletin boar. ggiatt Meeting to Open Fail 'Politicking' Campaign waves are beginning to form on the ocean of University politics, and students have been urged by clique chairmen of both parties to jump in for a swim. Campus Lion parties will hold their first clique meetings of the year at 7 p.m:toMorrow, Campus will meet in 10 Sparks and Lion in 121 Sparks. Both, meetings will be open to the pub- 15 0 . lie. Tickets Herbert Levin, Campus party• clique chairman, said the clique gathering will be for organiza- For Concert tional purposes and for the regis-, • • tration of party members. Applications for committee' St II I Remain memberships and chairManships will be distributed at the meet- Approximately 150 tickets for t ing. The forms also may be filled the Eleanor Steber concert tomur ,row night in Schwab Auditorium out at the lietzel Union desk. are available to students today The co-chairmen of the party committees will comprise the from T 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. at the ,Het steering committee, usually about' zel Union desk. 20 members. Elections Scheduled Levin said students must be present at this or the next meet ing—to be held Oct. 6—in order to vote for freshman and- sopho more clique officers at party elec tions Oct. 13. Five clique officers for each class and an All-University clique corresponding secretary will be elected at the Oct. 13 meeting. States Views In urging students to attend the clique meeting, Levin said: "Student politics is probably the best way to get a start in stu dent government at our Univer sity. It provides an opportunity for freshmen to make friends and move ahead in the realm of stu dent government." Here's what William O'Neill. Lion Party clique coairman. had • to say: "Many students go through school ignorant of the fact that they can play a major part in stu dent government. I urge all stu dents to accept a role in student government and fulfill their obli gation to better the University." Registration of party members also will be held at the Lion clique meeting. The agenda will include appointments to the steer ing committee and other party committees. Frosh Advisory Board The Frehman Class Advisory Board will not meet until iew ! freshman officers are elected, ac cording to George Smith, fresh- , man class president. Smith said no board actually exists since members are now: sophomores. The class officers, will choose a new board•after the officer elections. on the Mall. •A mass meeting of CPA can be called to discuss jobs of each member and the organizational structure of CPA. • It also was recommended the Student Laundry and Dry Cleaning Agency promote itself through publicity in The Daily Collegian and through CPA with an introductory offer and continued advertising through out the year. David Tressler, Book Exchange purchasing agent, was workshop chairman. Gail Harner, senior in home economics from Strauss-, town,. was secretary. Other members were Francis. LaPresto, Thomas Hollander,i /Steve Higgins, Barbara Simon.: James Meister, Theodore Haller, ,l Stanley Foster, James Macinko,' Michael Walker. 0. Edward Pol-; lock. Ossian R. MacKenzie, George IL P. •Leetch ar.d. William Fuller. Natural Death or Murder See Page 4 Dr. Albert Christ-Saner. chair man of the Artists Series commit tee, requests students who have tickets and cannot attend to give their tickets to students who do not have them. To Sing Bach For the first part of the pro gram Miss Steber will sing "My Heart Ever Faithful," from Can tata No. 68 and "Bist Du bei Mir," by Bach, and "Hear Ye Israel," from "Ellijah," by Mendelssohn. Five songs by Schubert will comprise the second part: "An die Musik," "Morgenlied," "Im Abendroth," "Die Forelle" and "Deiphine." For the third part. Miss Steber will sing Aria of Donna Anna, "Non mir dir," from "Don Giovanni," Act II by Mo zart. 11 Follow Intermission Following intermission she will sing "Villanelle" and "Le Spectre de la Rose" from "Nuits d'ete" by Berlioz, "Sing not 0 fair Circas sian 11 , 1 aid" by Rachmaninoff, "L'Ombra" (The Shadow) and "Dame la Mano" by Renato Bel lini. For her last selections, Miss Steber will sing "Hello, Hello" (from "The Telephone") by Gian- Carlo Menotti, "The Bird" by John Duke, "Nancy Hanks" by Katherine K. Davis, "Careless Love" (American folk song) ar ranged by J. J. Niles, "When I Am Dead" by Edwin Biltcliffe and "Serenade" by Alden Carpenter. ,Rain Will End By Afternoon For a change, it isn't the wea ther that's spoiling the Nittany Lion's plans. This time it's a party affair. That is, he was invited to two bang-up parties at the same time, which, indeed, is bad enough. To ' be at both would be very hard, since one is to be right ir. the middle of cam pus and the oth er way up by the Lion shrine To make the sit uation worse, he then received an invitation to a third party. He has not yet found out where it will be , "Well," he said, "guess I'll sto :to the one that serves 'h.? best refreshments." Perhaps the predicted end to ,the rain this afternoon and temp eratures in the low 60's will help to cool the Lion's disposition. To- Inight it will be still cooler, 45 to .51:1 degrees. 'Welcome' Winners Winners of downtown mer chants ''Welcome Days" spon sored by the State College Chamber of Commerce will be published in Tuesday's issue of The Daily Collegian. FIVE CENTS
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