The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 07, 1958, Image 21

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 7,
Coffee,
Are HU
No college campu
spot for students to m ,
The University h
brick, stone and plate
pus to answer this ne:
The Hetzel Union
Cope Na
Acting H
Of Forest
H. Norton Cope, prof
forestry, has been name
director of the School of
and acting head of the
rnent of Forest Manageml
He succeeds Dr. Wil
Bramble, who has bee
director of the school sit
when Maurice K Godd.
granted a leave of abs
serve as State Secretary
ests and Waters
Bramble, who also was i head of!
the Department of Forest Man-'
agement since it was organized in:
1954, has resigned to accept al
position as head of the Depart
ment of Forestry and Conserva
tion at Purdue University.
Cope, a native of Perkiomen-1
ville, is a University graduate. He
was named to the faculty in 1929
as instructor in forestry and
served from 1929 to 1931 and also
from 1941 to 1943 as resident di
rector of the Pennsylvania State
Forest School at Mont Alto, which
in 1929 became affiliated with the
University.
From 1916 to 1921 Cope served
with the U. S. Forest Service and
from 1921 to 1929 was a forest
supervisor with the Pennsylvania
State Department of Forests and
Waters.
Pageant--
(Continued from page one)
and lace gown with pearl and se
quin applique and a sweetheart
neckline. The back of her gown
was accented with a slight bustle
covered with small bows.
Miss Samley's very first step
into the beauty pageant world
came earlier this summer when
she was selected as Miss Lehigh
Valley as a candidate for the
state competition for Miss Penn
sylvania.
She became Miss Pennsylvania
In the Longwood Gardens pageant
in June. Now that the Miss Amer
ica competition is over, Miss Sam
ley will continue to fulfill her
duties as Miss Pennsylvania with
tours and personal appearances.
Miss Samley began dancing les
sons when she was three years
old. Last llear she was choreog
rapher and secretary of Thes
pians. She was also a member of
the women's debate team.
McLANAHAN DRUG STORE
Your
•Prescriptio
Vitamin N
°Hallmark r
•Fanny .Far
•Penn State
and Novell
• Costume d
WN
weary •School and Stationery Supplies
..^HEONETTE and SODA FOUNTAIN
Featuring Breyer's Ice Cream
Open daily 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
onversation
B Features
is complete without one particular
et for coffee, talking and dancing.
I:s provided a modern $2.75 million
•lass building near the center of cam-
uilding, more commonly abbreviated
the HUB, was named in honor of
the late Dr. Ralph Dorn Hetzel,
president of the University from
1926 till his death in 1947. The
building was opened in 1955 dur
ing the University's celebration
of its centennial anniversary.
The main floor of the building
is devoted to areas for lounges,
reading rooms, art galleries, mu
sic rooms, a ballroom, an audi
torium and the HUB desk which
is a catch-all for lost and found,
information, theatrical and musi
cal ticket sales and notices of the
many student activities.
ed
ad
ssor of
acting
I orestry
Depai t
- nt.
iam C.
acting
ce 1955
rd was
nee to
of For-
The most popular feature of
the ground floor is the Lions Den
—true center of student social
activity. The Lions Den is a com
bination snack bar, card room
and dating bureau.
Facilities for table tennis,
checkers, shuffle board and card'
games occupy another section of
the ground floor.
At the beginning of the fall
and spring semesters the HUB
card room is used as a student
Used Book Agency. A student-run
supply and stationery store is al
so located on the ground floor in
addition to the Terrace room, a
cafeteria, open
.from 11:30 a.m. to
1:15 p.m. and from 4:45 to 6:45
p.m.
The campus post office is an
nexed to the ground floor using
University Park as the mailing
address.
The second floor of the HUB
is used for student government
offices an d activity meeting
rooms.
The use of the HUB's facilities
is managed by William S. Fuller,
director of associated student ac
tivities.
Collegian Starts 54th Year
(Continued from page eight)
editorial staff. The other three
editorial boards are Board of
Advanced Reporters, Board of
I n te r mediate Reporters and
the Cub Reporters.
The advanced board assists
the editors in the day-to-day
operation of the paper, as well
as covering regular beats and
general reporting assignments.
The inter mediate board
works directly under the City
Editor and the advanced re
porters. Its members also cov
er regular beats.
The cubs are newcomers to
the staff. They aid in writing
stories and headlines for the
paper and eventually move
with time and accomplishment
through the other three boards
on The Collegian.
Walgreen Agency
134 S. ALLEN STREET
'ne-Stop Department Drug Store
Headquarters for . . .
Drug and •Leading Cosmetics and Perfumes
ds •Humidified Tobaccos
and Cigarettes
*Parker and Esterbrook Pens
•Eastman and Argus Photography
Supplies
reefing Cards
er Candy
Souvenirs
es
Sundays and Holidays: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and $ to 10 p.m.
Completely Air-Conditioned
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
President Welcomes New Students
(Continued from page one)
since it was the only building,
all 69 members of that first
class and the entire faculty of
three professors lived and at
tended classes in it. The "cam
pus" was nothing but a bleak
hillside decorated only by piles
of debris left from the construc
tion. State College did not exist,
and the closest post office was
located at Boalsburg.
Thick, heavy doors had been
placed at the entrance to each
row of student rooms so that they
could be locked in the. evenings to
prevent the students from escap
ing their studies for lighter pur
suits. This practice, however, was
never enforced, since some par
ents objected that their sons
would be roasted alive if there
Orientation
Unit Members
Pledge Aid
Ruth Jo hns on and Richard
Friedman, student members of
the Orientation Week committee,
have writtea the following 'mes
sage welcoming new students:
To the Class of '62:
Welcome to Penn State! A long
awaited moment has arrived
you are now college students.
This week that lies before you
will be one of many new exper
iences, of enlightenment and ad
justment. Everything has been i
planned for you, and with only;
you in mind. Take advantage of
it.
There is a lot that you can
learn about your new home, and
many people want to help you.
All of us associated with Orienta
tion Week are at your service.
Your counselors have been spe
cially chosen from the most ac
tive and best-informed students
on campus. Please feel free to
look us up and inquire about
anything at any time. We are
here to help you. ,
Again, welcome to our college
community, and the best of luck
throughout this week and all
your college days.
A call for reporters will be
issued in The Collegian at a
later time.
Published Tuesday through
Saturday mornings, the regu
lar 8-page tabloid is divided
this way: Four pages to local
and campus news, one page to
AP news, one page to editorial
comment (including Bibler and
Peanuts) and two pages to
sports news and columns.
The three departments of
the business staff are adver
tising, circulation and promo
tion.
Both local and national ad
vertising is handled by the
"ad" staff.
The promotion staff handles
Collegian publicity and the
circulation staff distributes the
paper to pick-up points.
were a fire. Only one curriculum
was offered, and each student was
required to work three hours
each day on the farm connected
with the school. There were no
laboratories, and the library con
sisted of a handful of useless and
outdated books donated by in
terested citizens.
In these 100 years, .P en n
State has grown into one of the
largest universities in the coun
try. Your class numbers al
most 3500 young men and wom
en, and the original faculty of
three professors has grown to
a staff of 1700. You can select
your field of study from among
the almost 70 separate curricula
offered through 10 different col
leges. Old Main, a replacement
of the original building, is but
one of about 150 major build
ings located on one of the most
beautiful campuses in the coun
try.
There are, you see, many dif
ferences. But there are also im
portant similarities. We still have,
as you will notice, unsightly piles
of debris from new construction,
the price we must pay for expand
ing the educational opportunity
in Pennsylvania.
We still worry about students
using their time wisely, but yet
we do not resort to locked doors
or other forced means to achieve
this result. One hundred years
ago, Penn State was operating at
maximum capacity with its 69
students, just as it is today with
Jot. your COM/Ort
and Convenience
State College's newest and most
modern barber shop
Crew cuts our specialty
HERB'S
BARBER SHOP -
233 S. ALLEN ST.
PAGE TWENTY-ONE
its student body of approximately
14,000.
Most important of all, Penn
State stands today, as it did then,
as a pioneer in a new and dynamic
type of education—an education
designed to prepare young men
and women for vital roles in the
life of our country as mothers
and fathers, as citizens of the
Commonwealth and of the na
tion, and as members of a profes
sion. You are the inheriters of a
tradition formed by an unbroken
succession of 100 Penn State
classes.
According to this tradition,
your years at Penn Stale will
be a period of intense, exciting
personal experience. It will be
a time for exploring, for dis
covering, for sifting and com
paring that which is known
and that which is thought by
man. It will be a time in which
to develop a love of truth, a
moral conviction that knowl
edge is requisite to freedom,
and an intellectual conviction
that education and scholarship
are requisite to progress.
Yours will be the privilege and
the responsibility of carrying this
tradition into Penn State's second
century. In this way, you share
a spiritual bond with those 69
young men who ploughed through
the mud up the hill to Old Main
to start their classes in February
1859.
Good luck and best wishes to
all of you.