The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 25, 1958, Image 5

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    TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 1958
Bus Ad Career Day
Speakers Announced
Speakers have been named for the afternoon segment of
the Business Administration Career Day program, March 13.
The afternoon program will begin at 2 p.m. !
The accounting section o£ the program will meet in the|
Mineral Industries Auditorium. Speakers for the section'
will be Paul M. Herring, national
vice president of the National As
sociation of Accountants, Kutz
itown; Thomas H. Carroll, CJP.A.,I
[president of the Pennsylvania In-i
stitute of Certified Public Ac-!
countants, Philadelphia.
The insurance and finance
group will meet in 111 Boucke. |
Speakers for the group will be j
William J. Graul. president of i
the Pennsylvania Association of j
Insurance Agents, Reading; Ro- |
beri S. Hussey. C.L.U.. regional |
vice president of the New York i
Life Insurance Company. PhU
adelphia. ahd Edward B. Mulli
gan. partner in the Green. El
: lis and Anderson Brokerage
! firm, Wilkes-Barre.
The section discussing econom
ics and labor' wfll meet in 110
Osmond and will be addressed by
Elizabeth Johnson, director. Bur
eau of Women and Children,
State Department of Labor and
[lndustry, Harrisburg.
Management will meet in 214
Boucke. Speakers wiU be George
D. Lobingier, manager of the edu
cational department of the West
inghouse Electric Corporation.
Pittsburgh and John L. McLucas,
president of Haller, Raymond and
Brown, State College.
The marketing section will
meet in the Heizel Union audi
torium. John A. Byrem. buyer
for S. H. Kress and Company,
Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J., and Sidn'f
N. Colin, sales coordinator for
the American Seating Company;
Philadelphia, will address the
group.
The transportation group will
hear John N. Kiefer Jr. of the
traffic department of the Inter
national Salt Company Inc.,
'Scranton, in 112 Osmond.
53 Frosh
Awarded
Math Prize
Fifty-three freshmen will be
awarded a freshman honors prize
for _ outstanding work in their
basic course in mathematics at
7:30 tonight in the main lounge of
the Hetzel Union Building.
The course. Mathematics 41, in
which approximately 1350 stu
dents were enrolled for the fall
semester, is a course in analytic
geometry’ and is required for stu
dents in the scientific and tech
nical curriculums.
Dr. Orrin Frink, professor and
head of the department of mathe
matics, said the outstanding work
of the students indicated they had
received excellent training in their
high school courses..
Each of the students 'Cited will
receive as a prize a copy of
“Mathematics in Western - Cul
ture” by Kline. This prize has
been provided by the Curtis-
Wright Corporation. Winners are:
George Sabot, Ernest Lofgren, Louis
Dufreane. William Grimm, Eugene Gru
nier, Leif Mo Ho. Marilyn Trimble. Jesse
Koontz, Donald Gardner. Gerald Ruffner,
Donald Curry, Samuel Diehl, David Opfer
man.
Donald Clayett. John Kardos, William
Winter, Dougla* Baker. Howard Coleman.
Charles Steerman, Stephen Brown, G«srge
Bergey, Charles Caston, Thomas Savits.
Robert Howard. Gary Bergholtz, Ronald
Smith.
Richard - Bonser, Adrian Tewksbury,
Frank Radler, Robert Tipping, William
Hardham. David Wahl. Lawrence Koons,
George Gilchrist. Edwin Marshall. Otis
Slagle, Harry Mathews, William Hart
mann, Tra Coen.
Glenn Johnson, Murray Garhrick, Robert
Larsen. David Ruppert. James Carnes.
Elisabeth Dowling, William Ward. James
Newman, .William Praat, Paul .Graham,
Thomas Rockwell, Marion Siemans, Jef
frey Parsons and Richard Marts.
Interviews—
(Continued from page four)
AT & T (Western Electric): Mar 11-13:
J BS in EE. ME. MS in Fhys. Chem for
research & engineering development.
Bell Telephone of Penna: Mar 11-13 InEE.
lE. ME. CE.
Dtrqoesne Light: Mar 11; EE. ME. CE.
Jr & Sr in above fields for summer em
ployment
Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co: Mar
. 11: LA, Bus Adm, Psy. interested in life
insurance work; Philadelphia area.
Lit Brothers: Mar 11-12; Bus Adm, Home
„ Ee, LMR. LA. also Jr in above fields
for summer employment.
Nations! Security Agency: Mar 11. BS &
MS in Fhys. Math. EE. ME. LA linguists.
SandU Corp: Mar 11-13: BS in EE. ME.
' lE, US in Math. Fhys for R&D.
CAMP INTERVIEWS
Camp Menatoma. Me., Feb. 28 and Mar.
*1: Camp Woodlands. Me., Mar. 3: Clear
Pool Camp. N.Y., Mar. 3: Camp Delwood,
'Penna., Mar. 4-5; Indian Lake Camp.
Penna., Mar. 3.
Behind the News—
(Continued from page four)
And Pennsylvania State has
her WSGA Black Mark sys
tem and political party meet
ings.
Penn State students should
be proud that they are free
from the shocking and outra
geous vices of other-under
graduate bodies.
... but we can't help won
dering if there is any student
apathy problem at Glasgow
University.
See Sandlers
New Hook-Up
Oxfords
$8.95
at
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYI VANIA
May Day Candidates
To Be Photographed
Senior candidates for May queen
and members of the freshman,
sophomore and junior classes who
are candidates for May Day at
tendants will be photographed at
7 tonight at the Penn State Photo
Shop.
Candidates have been asked to
wear dark skirts and white
blouses.
Cook to Address Club
Donald Cook, director of the 1
Placement Service, will speak to
the Psychology Club at 7:40 to
night in 12 Sparks.
He will discuss employment op
portunities for graduates.
the new Student Dry Cleaning and Laun-
dry Service branch in REDIEER HALL.
Now you can enjoy Balfurd’s fine cleaning
service at the least possible personal in-
convenience.
“If you are-for'mee clothes you will
love the way WE care for them!"
Balfurd’s
William J. Smith
Poet-Translator
Smith to Give
Poetry Reading
At 8 Tonight
William Jay Smith, poet and
| translator, will present the first
;lecture of the 11th annual Sim
mons Series at 8 tonight.
i He will present “Poetry Read
ings” at 8 in 121 Sparks. The lec
ture is open to the public.
The Simmons Series, sponsored
by the Department of German,
honors the late Dr. Lucretia V. .T.
Simmons, for many years profes
sor and head of the Department
of German.
Smith’s works has included a
collected edition of noetry. en
titled. “Poems: 1947-57." and two
children’s books in verse.
He has translated and edited
“Poems of a Multimillionaire” by
Valery Larbaud and ' "Selected
Writings of Jules Laforgue.” •
Both, his poetry and transla
tions have been praised by prom
inent contemporary poets includ
ing W. H. Auden. Stephen Spen
der, Rolfe - Humohries, Horace
Gregory. Dudley Fitts and Louise
Bogan. Poetry Magazine awarded
him its Young Poets Prize in
1945 and he was Phi Beta Kappa
poet at Columbia University in
1951.
Smith is a graduate of Wash
ington University in St. Louis,
Mo., and has engaged in graduate
work at Columbia and, as a
Rhodes Scholar, at Oxford Uni
versity. He has also_ studied in
France and Italy.
His wife is Barbara Howes,
who is also a poet and former
editor of “Chimera.”
The U.S. Department of Com
merce reports that the nation
now uses 262 billion gallons of
water a day.
Careful
Cleanets
University Program
Rivals Ma Perkins
Ma Perkins now has competition on the University level
—“Penn State: Men and Ideas” is bouncing over the TV waves.
This new series of programs, which originates on campus,
is broadcast over WFBG-TV Channel 10. Altoona. The pro
grams, 10 minutes long, may be seen from 9:50 to 10:00 a.m.
Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Each program deals with a
limited, cohesive unit ot sub
ject matter, one or two con
cepts or ideas rather than a
broad, general treatment of
complex subject matter.
The series is bein s handled co
operatively by the nine colleges
of the University. The first week’s
programs, the week of Feb.' 3. 1
were presented by the College of
Education, with Dean John R.
Rackley host. One of the pro
grams discussed the recent Gov
ernor’s Conference on Education
m Harrisburg.
The program for fhe second
■week was presented by the
Arts and Sciences Extension.
The College of Engineering and
Architecture, with Deai Merritt
>A. Williamson as host, presented
the series last week. The pro
gram r dealt with the place of
the University centers in relation
to technical engineering, the Uni
versity’s nuclear reactor and con
tributions of the University to
the International Geophysical
Year.
The series is being presented
by the three branches of ROTC
this week.
The schedule for the coming
weeks is:
Week of March 3. General Ex
tension: week of March 10. The
College of Physical Education
and Athletics; week of March
17. The College of the Liberal
Arts, week of March 24, The
College of Home Economics;
week of March 31. The College
of Chemistry and Physics.
Sponsors of the remaining pro
grams have not been named.
The programs follow Sociology
1. also broadcast on Channel 10."
hilarious,
7 • •
. exciting,
intimate,
psychological game
Hiliel Social Committee
To Meet at Foundation
The Hiliel Social Committee
will meet at 7:30 tonight m the
lounge of the foundation to d,>
cuss plans for the Puvim Carni
val to take place on March 15.
Any student may attend.
for adults only
P4GF FtV?