Today's Fo ecast: Cloud Cold VOL. 59, No. 56 IE De Compl 50th tes Year y's industrial rtment the ted States—is If century of nts for busi- I ry. The Universi engineering dep oldest in the Un completing a h preparing stud ness and Indus From a 1910 gr. two men, who p 2-year program, duating class of rticipated in a he department ' second largest ing its first 50 ated 1938 engi- has grown to th in the nation. Du years it has grad In the first years of the de partment's- existence students made all the furniture used in the engineering units. Indus trial engineering students made the first 20 ornamental electric lamp posts for the lighting of the campus. Benjamin W. Niebel, head of the department, said today's program deemphasizes handicraft. Contem porary emphasis is on not "how to do it" but "why," he said. Industrial engineering as a cur riculum closely parallels mechan ical engineering with greater em phasis on higher mathematics and automation, according to Niebel, who predicts this trend will con tinue and intensify. Recently about 80 students per year have graduated as indus trial engineers. Niebel said the mortality rate is comparable to that of other engineering cur riculums. Approximately one fourth of those who initially en roll in industrial engineering graduate in the curriculum. Three coeds have graduated as industrial engineers in the last 10-year period, Niebelsaid. He en couraged them to enroll, as oppor tunities in the field are good for women, he said. "The future of industrial engi neering looks very rosy. There are and will be more jobs than grad uates," the department he'ad said. "With the shortage of labor in the next decade, there will be a great need for industrial engineers to devise new and improved meth ods of production to meet the pub. lie's increased demand for goods and services," Niebel stated. Wrestling Bout, Pavement Fall Hospitalize Lion Take one wrestling bout with the Pitt Panthers, add one fall on an icy pavement and it equals one aching Nittany Lion in the University Hospital. 'Af ter Pitt's football team worked over the Nittany gridders in the first half of the Thanks giving Day gam:, the Panther engaged in a vic ous -bout with the Nittany Lion (Jack Behler) in an effort to fini.h off the Penn State spirit. - In a fit of al raised so high .1 Lion's back , that i; ple of muscles wi tor said -he pulle.l in the ,saeroiliac}, Complications - when the Lion sli pavement and lan terior. He ekpect. hospital today aft' trig on his stomac ger, the _hair the Nittany pulled a cou h it. (The doc -1 some muscles let in Monday liped on an icy J ed on his - ta leave the .two days ly 1, there. '- Prof to Disco !=] _ Dr. Edgar H. Le professor of RuSgi the Pulitzer prize, '.`Doctor Zhivago," tiak. at the Found of Phi Beta.KaPP orary society at 6 row at the Auto rman; assistant discuss winning -novel, • y &iris Paster ret:say. dinner national hosi -13- p.m. tomor . , c, . Or , 1 r 4 ai H 1,4.(.1,-,rx 6 :: , 13 rij i , 6. STATE COLLEGE, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 3. 1958 —Collegian photo by Marty Schorr ICE-COVERED HUB LAWN makes a good' sliding area for fresh men (left to right) .Barbara Englehard, Betty Anne Balotin and Jo Anne Hornstein. The girls are using the covers of cookie tins as sleds, and claim this sliding to be more fun than—bluebooks. Hunting Hinders Snow Removal Cabinet Will Sponsor Party For Spring Orientation Week By ELAINE MIELE A party honoring new fresh men and transfer students will be sponsored- by versity Cabinet in Recreation Building folloWing the var sity gymnastics, meet, against West Virginia on Jan. 3L The Phi Mu Alpha- band -will play and other entertainment will be provided,' Darold W. Perkins, associate - dean of men, said. All students will be admitted to the party. - The new students will be able to sit in a reserved center section at, the gymnaities meet: A banner will be displayed in their honor and they-Will be welcomed by the cheerleaders. The orientation week pre- FOR A BETTER PENN STATE gram for the spring semester dent councils on campus. will begin on Jan. 27 at the An activities exposition on Jan. 29 in the HUB ballroom will show presidentl convocation in Sch. new students the associations and wab Auditorium. activities they can join. - Additional events will be added A recreation day will be spon .._ to the usual spring orientation program, Perkins said. A program, "Penn State History and Traditions" will-be presented for the first time at 2 p.m. Jan. 28 in the Hetzel Union assembly room. An informal party will be held at 8 - p.m. Jan. 27 in the HUB. There will be a song and cheer program in the- assembly room and a tour, of the-HUB facilities Will follow: Movies and other en tertainment 'are also plahned. The Inter-College Council Board Will _present a program Jan 29 to acquaint the new stu dents with the role of the au. Butt Suggested As Fire Cause CHICAGO (W)—An expert theorized yesterday that a sneak smoker flipped a cigarette into a waste basket and may have started the disastrous fire that killed 90 in Our Lady of the Angels School. Sgt. Drew Brown, head o the best theory about the cause, of Monday's fire was "a care- 1 lessly discarded cigarette, tossed: into a waste basket by a sneak smoker." He emphasized it is strictly a theory. But investigators did not elimi nate the possibility the blaze was deliberately touched off. The FBI turned its attention to the tragedy. Plans were made for a mass burial of the young victims of the nation's third worst school fire in 100 years. The flash of flames in the 40- year-old building snuffed out the lives of 87 children and 3 nuns. Still in hospitals were 78 others -75 youngsters, a fireman, the school janitor and a nun. Sgt. Brown, who carefully In spected the charred building, said his theory was based on these circumstances: Every day, about 2:30 p.m., boys took waste baskets to the basement and the material was burned later in the furnace by the janitor. Near this disposal point is a boy's washroom where a lad might steal a smoke. Old exami nation papers also were stored in the area. The area is In the northeast corner of the brick building. The fire began there and gushed up a wooden staircase. Sgt. Brown said two boys were in the area, emptying waste bas kets, as late as 2:40 p.m. That was two minutes before the first alarm sounded. The boys told Brown they smelled something like a smouldering substance. An eyewitness who may have been the first to spot the fire told police the first ladders raised to ward the upper floor—the second —were too short. Fire Commissioner Robert 3. Quinn said arson had not been stricken from the list of pos sibilities although no positive evidence along that line had been found. "We always Suspect arson Where there is loss of life, partic ularly-in a public place, and we cannot establish the cause of the fire," he said. . . A newsman asked if the inter est stemmed from bombing of Jewish houses of worship in At lanta, Ga., and Peoria, DI., and bomb Pcarr s in public and par°- . (Continued on page two) sored by the Outing Club on Jan. 31. There will be skating at the ice rink for all students. A special program for men at , Recreation Building will include I handball, basikelball, paddlebalL volleyball, badminton and bowl ' 'Mg. The program' for women at White Hall consists of bowling, swimming, basketball and volley ball, Alpha Phi Omega, menri..serv ice fraternity, and Gamma Sigma Sigma, women's service fraternity, will sponsor tours of the campus+ from 9 a`.m, to 12 noon. Jan. ?Al. ] They will Mart from te main lounge of the HUB. So For— Remarkable See Page 6 the police arson squad, said Faculty Tea Be Held WSGA Junior and senior women will meet faculty members at the jun ior-senior faculty reception from - 7:30 to 9:30 tonight in the Hetzel Union main lounge. • About 150 faculty members._ members of the administration and residence hall hostesses will attend by invitation. All junior and senior women are invited. Presidents of student councils and hat societies selected repre sentative faculty members. All colleges will be represented. Faculty attendance was not lim ited in previous years. The reception, which is spon sored by the Women's Student Government Association, is de signed to better acquaint junior and senior women with the fac ulty and administration. Members of Covens, sophomore women's hat society; Chimes, junior women's hat society; and Scrolls and Mortar Board, senior women's hat societies, will serve as hostesses. Jean Kissick, chairman, said she expects between 250 and 300 iunior and senior women to at tend. The receiving line will in clude: President and Mrs. Eric A. Walker: Dr. Robert G. Bernreu ter, special assistant to the pres ident for student affairs, and Mrs. Bernreuter: Dean of Wo men Pearl 0. Weston: Miss Kis sick and Jessie Jangigian, WSGA vice president. Jean Nigh. Linda Segar. Arlene D'Onofrio. Anne Ruthrauff, San dra Shoeren and Martha Shipp are on the committee for the re ception. Rlrough Bulletin Gains Top Award "The Borough Bulletin," a monthly magazine published by the Institute of Local Government at the University, has been select ed as the outstanding magazine among all U.S. municipal publica tions in nationwide competition sponsored by the American Mu. nicinal Association. "The Borough Bulletin" is de voted to the improvement of pub lie administration and exchange of ideas and information on 'mu nicipal affairs for the officials of the 1000 Pennsylvania boroughs, Major George Christopher, president of' the association, will present the award to the Institute today at the annual Congress of the AssOciation.- WEIFNI Will Preview Artist Series Concert WDFM will present a preview of the coming Artist Series con cert at 9:15' tonight. Mrs. Elizabeth Reynolds, voice instructor from 1944 to 1952, will discuss Miss Elizabeth Schwarz kopf and the type of music she • 'is famous for singing. The Schwarzkopf program will be given on Dec. 10 in Schwab Auditorium. FIVE CENT