PAGE TWO Nourse Named Guest Professor Dr. Edwin G. Nowise, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers to former President Harry S. Truman, has accepted an appointment as distinguished visiting professor of ece nomics for next semester. Nourse is now vice chairman of the Joint Council on Indic' Queen To Be Named At Ball Tonight Indies will crown a queen at the Autumn Ball tonight. The ball, which will be held from 9p m. to midnight in the Howl Union ballroom, will cli max the Indie Week celebration. Indie Week activities began Mon day. lndie Queen hopefuls are Eliza-j beth Greve, Marilyn Weierbach, Mary Reidenbaugh, Dorothy Maz-! m ik and Sylvia Brague. The fin alists were announced at the In die talent show Thursday night. Music for the semi-formal dance will be provided by the Associa tion of Independent Men band. Tickets at $2 a couple may be purchased at the HUB desk, Nit tany 20 and Waring hall. Indic Week included a bridge tournament, exchange dinners and fireside discussions, a talent show and a banner contest at last nights pep rally. The celebration is co-sponsored by the Association of Independent Men and Leonides. UCA Will Make Trip To Aged Persons' Home The University Christian Asso ciation will travel to the Belle fonte County Home for the Aged to meet and to read to the resi dents at 1.30 p.m. tomorrow. Members who wish to attend' should end University Ext. 541. Placement Service Job For Competition to Be Keen 1959 Grads, Says Cook This year's graduates will find job competition keen, although the general employment picture is improving, predicts Donald M. Cook, assistant director of the placement service. Cook previewed the job situation at the Middle Atlantic Placement Conference for employers and placement service personnel last week at Pocono Manor. Student s, especially those with poorer academic records, will have to search harder for o p p o r tunities. Employers are showing more interest in scholastic records than in pre• vious years, he said "However, a student's records should show improvement, rather than a downward slope in achievement," he said, Employers are also interested in how a student has spent his spare time, if he has worked'or participated in activities. The number of activities is not as im portant as the contribution he has made to each organization, ac cording to Cook. Men with military obligations will have the hardest time find ing a job again this year. A senior should have as much in formation as possible about his military status before being in terviewed. The fall interview program at, the placement service shows al good cross section of employers in spite of some cancellations, he said, Interview schedules for the, spring semester promise to bell AN=M I THESIS MULTILITHINO ECONOMICAL •AST MMERCIAL PRINTING L COLLEGE As 114711 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Economic Education in Washing ton D C. He is the second person named under the University's new program of distinguished visiting professorships in the fields of the social sciences, the humanities, the physical sci ences and the biological sci ences. Dr. Herbert Heaton, chairman' of the Department of History at the University of Minnesota, is, serving as distinguished visiting professor of history this semester. Lawrence E. Dennis, vice presi dent for academic affairs, said the program of visiting professorships is aimed to enrich the University's educational program "by bringing to campus teachers and scholars rof international renown whose presence will serve to inspire and to instruct students and faculty alike" Nourse is past president of the American Farm Economic Asso ciat ion. He taught for 15 years in the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, and at state in stitutions in South Dakota, Ar kansas and lowa. Turning his attention to re search, Nourse studied price policies and income relations and served as vice president of the Brookings Institution in Washington. i Nourse has served as U.S. dele-; gate to the biennial assembly of the International Institute of Ag riculture at Rome, Italy, and as American member of the Mixed Committee on Nutrition of the League of Nations. Among books Nourse has writ ten are "America's Capacity to Produce." "Price Making in a De mocracy" and "Economics in the 'Public Service." By PHYLLIS WESTCOTT very active, with a wide variety of employers visiting the campus. The years from 1950 to 1957 were "gravy years•• when em ployment opportunities for col lege graduates were at a maxi mum. The recession last spring hit the '5B college graduates first. Some companies cancelled cam pus visits altogether, and others hired on a percentage basis. Sum mer employment was at a mini mum. Most '5B graduates did find jobs with the exception of some men with unsatisfied military obliga tions. The average graduate, ex cluding teachers, received a start ing salary of $426 per month. This figure was weighted by- technical graduates, whose salaries often YEA LIONS:: WHIP FURMAN TODAY The very songs that you will be singing today are available at The Music Room on a 45 rpm record. Buy your copy SOON 111110111 kill AD 7 .1 WOMB IMIILLAIN :470:11 1111011k.a-g-,:itEraM Theater Group Will Present Folk Comedy A mother, recently widowed, objects to her daughter's "man hankerings" until she finds her self becoming interested in a man in the 5 O'clock Theatre's presen tation of David Stekol's folk com edy, "Gonna Shout All Over God's Heaven," at 5 p.m. Tuesday in the Little Theatre in Old Main. The play takes place on a small Midwestern farm. The daughters, Dolly, Martha and Susan, want to go to a dance, but the mother, Pearl, wants them to embroider and listen to her read Ihe Bible. Situations like this arise until Joe Redbird, an Indian who works on the farm, upsets the whole system. Pearl is played by Helen Cum mings, Joe Redbird by Joe Ser vello, Dolly by Evelyn Bernhard, Martha by Pat Paladino and Su san by Betsy Boyce. The playwright is a senior in arts and letters from Glenside. Floyd Santoro, senior in thea tre arts from Johnstown, will di rect the play. "Gonna Shout All Over God's Heaven" is the first play to be presented by the 5 O'clock Thea tre during the fall semester. Jan ice Champagne, manager, said the group could begin presenting plays earlier this year because there is material left over from last year. Partys to Nominate-. (Continued from page one) for final nominations meetings. Platforms for both parties must be handed in to Elections Com mittee chairman, Lynn Ward, by 7 p.m. Wednesday. At that time the platforms will be reviewed by the committee. Any plank not approved by the Elections Committee at this meeting will be presented to the committee next Friday. Horse Show to Be Held The Riding Club will hold a horse show at 1:15 p.m. tomor row in the riding stables. exceed this amount. the placement service facilities. A student should read and in quire about a company before applying for a job there.. The senior who has an under standing cif his own goals and ambitions will have a better chance for success than the one who is merely looking for a job, he said. •••••••••••••••••••••••• WMAJ las 81p* On a :32 eatie ne D Show 2:20 Kerning er 2:4; News Ilesailines it:irf 1 11:110 11:05 11:12 42:11 12:15 1 12.4. 12:34 1:11 New* and SMartal 1:12 2:241 2:41 1:22 1:31 1:911/ 1:15 2:311 i 7:IN 4 715 1 7:45 Paddle Berrie* Praittras I 11:211 i a :44: Ths Weriil - "Pemba 2:31 ..' 2:35 Capital atairallitatj 11:611 S :OS 14 MI 111 :OS 11:04 „.,„_,........... News 11:41 , _ SPette 11 :14 12:9 1::15 1:41 1 :Ili . Slits Off —Collegian photo by Larry Epstein THETA KAPPA PHI fraternity members try to re-erect flagpole which fell on their house after a pledge tried to change a bolt in the bottom section of the pole. The pole ripped a piece of slate off the roof, when it fell. Chorus Line Leads 450 at Pep Rally "Splish Splash"„ a chorus line of football-helmeted co eds, and torch-bearing cheer leaders led a crowd of about 450 in last night's pep rally for today's football game with Furman. The Penn State Blue Band started the rally with the song `Splash Splash" in the theme of Band Day, Rock 'n' Roll. The Band: also played another "rock-and-1 roller,' "Bird-Dog". Ten Kappa Alpha Theta sorority coeds presented a kick line of football players dancing to "Mi. Touchdown, U.S.A." The .parade before the rally was led down Pollock Road around the Hetzel Union Building to the -. ..TAT11 NOW Feat. 1:30, 3:32, 5:34, 7:36, 9:38 TINY CURTIS • MONEY PIPER Ztir 219 t1e attalw or 71; * ~,I t • Sunday Feature 2:00, 3:53. 5:46, 7:39, 9:32 COMINGI "In Lova and War" i~IY~Y~,I~I'I ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS WEEK! BEGINS SUNDAY Save This Schedule!, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1938 front of Old Main by torch-bear ing cheerleaders and members of Druids, junior men's hat society; and new initiates of the Varsity "S" Club. Samuel Wolcott, former student and head cheerleader in 1956, was master of ceremonies. Ernie Baer, lacrosse coach and speaker at the rally, told the crowd the team members face a tough job when they meet Fur man tomorrow. The student's job, he said, is to make themselves heard through cheers. ••••••••000000*••••••••• nrolt !fit • NOW SHOWING • Gregory Peck . Jean Simmons THE BIG COUNTRY 11•••••••••••••••••••••fle ..:. :~ ~ s Today - Continuous From 1:30 Roßo,44Hoci , . • , • t . . , nolo • • COLOR : lEVEILT GAIKAN1•14}1111 MCI voIARSZLIAISSaI A UNIVERSAL•IATERNATIONAL •o***Gos••••Afiss•seesollo •SUNDAY• Yet Htlrnner • Deborah Herr "TNE KING AND I " MONDAY Hurt Lancaster • Shirley Booth Come Back Little Sheba so TUESDAY • Frank Sinatra • Debbie Reynolds "THE TENDER TRAP" WIMINESDAY B ll ai r di e fi t 'efifir Ga ig n i r A • THURSDAY • Clifton Webb • Dorothy McGuire "3 Coins in the Fountain" FRIDAY Humphrey Bogart • Ingrid Bergman " CASABLANCA " • SATURDAYS GREGORY PECK "12 O'CLOCK HIGH