THURSDAY. AUGUST 13, 1939• Institute To Begin Sunday The fifth annual training program for members of the Credit Union Institute will be gin on campus Sunday. The purpose of the training program is to increase the skills of Credit Union Leaders so that they may better serve their own chapters and leagues, and will be attended by employees of the Union and members at large. A first-year plan of study is offered for new me bers while the second-year plan is reserved for those who have ttended be fore. Five basic areas of study will be presented includin• leadership training, economics, 'redit Union in Prospective, Ope ations of a Credit Union and Pub tc Relations. The meetings will f , e conducted by the College of Busihess Admini stration and the Conference Center for Continued E d u cla t ion with Joseph Bradley, professor of_ fi nance, as chairman. Other commit tee members are Dean Ossian MacKenzie, Dean of the College of Business Administration, Berry B. Lethbridge, director of business ad ministration extension, and W. R. Bechdel, director of conference center continued education. Credit Union Leagues . will send 100 representatives from Washing ton, D.C., Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania to the meetings. Union to Open 10th Institute On Monday Over 75 members of unions be longing to the Pennsylyania Fed eration of Labor will arrive Mon day to open their 10th annual insti tu*e. The institute, which will be held: through Thursday, will have as its. theme preparing for changes in the' economic growth of the United States and the social needs arising from this growth. Discussions, lectures, panels and buzz sessions will be field to see what can be done to prepare for such changes. Topics to be dis cussed are bargaining, legislation and community action pertaining to the main theme. The groups will hold an opening session Monday afternoon and then w:11 hold a picnic at Penn's Cave Guest speakers at the sessions will be Congressmen Herman Toll, Sen. Jo Hays (Dem-Centre), Aaron Druckman, associate professor of .philosophy, and Arthur Reede, pro fessor of economics. Union repre sentatives will also lead discus sions. Exhibition-- (Continued from page four) temporary Soviet literature; and a live pianist were all pre sented. The pianist received numerous encores for his mas tery on the keyboard. The food and clothing ex hibits were simple and to the point: the Soviets are striving toward better and more eco nomical production methods. As was true of the farm_ ma chinery and automobiles the clothing styles were simple, rugged and-very hard looking. The highlight of the show was probably the display of Soviet science to the study of outer space and problems of space travel. In the center of the entire exhibit was the world's first artificial earth satellite and the space missile which carried the famous dog into outer space. Soviet brains, brawn and manpower were most evident. Many of their scientific achievements are far superior to ours; in other fields we have the lead. The question i re mains: will the e ' change ex hibits contribute to • lasting world peace. ALUMNI COLLEGE meets in HUB for session covering U.S. foreign policy, Miss Betty Blakeslee, administrative assistant in continuing education, leads the group (lower right). Staff Members in Alaska Analyze Deposits of Coal Coal deposits in the remote Arc- present unusual mining and pre-, tic regions of Alaska have been l paration problems. analyzed by scientists at the Uni-i i The most striking botanical, versity working under a grantl characteristic was the lack of any, from the Arctic Institute of Northlpositive evidence of the presence America. of fossils of flowering plants. Re- Two University staff members!mains of plants similar to e‘ i - ' in 1956 collected samples of coal, green types of today were found from seams in three different' parts of the Arctic slope of the , in the coal. 1 country's newest state. The re-L gions visited were so remote and A . ' , rson Detection Course the terrain so rough that they, could be reached only by Alaska's;Completed by Triebold hardy 'bush" planes. , Harold 0. Triebold, Jr., safety New laboratory techniques had' assistant in the Department of to be devised at Penn State tolSecurity, was one of 35 safety study these coals, explains Dr.lmen who completed a course in William Snackman, associate pro-parson detection and investigation lessor of paleobotany, who heads'at Lewistown, Aug. 3-7. the Coal Research Section. The course was conducted by `'The coals proved to be un-, the Pennsylvania State Police and usual in several respects and mlthe Department of Public Instruc some ways were physically dif-Ition of the Commonwealth for se ferent from coals of southern lat- 1 lected applicants. itudes," Dr. Spackman said. They were highly fractured by I Dry ice is solidified carbon di ice action, a factor which wouldloxide gas. your official NH STATE (LASS RING and Whiter "Thousands proudly wear this ring" IiUMMLR CCFLLCUIPirI, znAre PCINN3YLVANIA L. G. RALFOUR CO. in the ATHLETIC STORE iCert m Honors Zerfoss The late D. Samuel Z2rfciss. a t !former member of the faculty eine>. law College of Mineral Industries,. Kay has returned to Norway was honored in a paper presontedhwhey. he will btudy under a fel vett has returned to before the Basic Science Division:jA°r‘avise's". of the American Ceramics Society: at its recent national meeting in Chicago, 111. Authors of the memorial were' Dr. H. M Davis, piofessor of chemical metallurgy, Dr. N. J.I Kreidl and Dr. N. W. Taylor. I A graduate of the University, Zcrfoss was an. assistant profes-i sor of ceramics at Per,n State be- 1 fore taking charge of the - Crystal Growth and Preparation Section,' Crystal Branch of the Naval Re-' search Laboratory in 1947. He' went to the National Bureau of, Standards in 1965. Catherman's BARBER SHOP basement of HWel Slate College Daily 8-5:30 - Sat. 8.12 Rainbow Girls: PAGE StVLN Research Associates alsign Physics Posts Mol timer I. Kai and nederick 1. Lovell, tesearch associates in )liN•ic:•, have resigned their pOSI -100, to IVII.IIII to their home coon Butlers Jewelry DIAMONDS a WATCHES IWatch and Jewelry Repairing 111 E. Beaver Ave. A-100 / °I N MAKE ‘2(AMtetirriati'' LAST ALL YEAR LONG Capture it all in Sna • shots StvmZe CAMERA Electric-eye makes settings automatically! This amazing new camera gives you good, deal pictures on bright days, cloudy days, in sun or shade ... automatically' The electric-eye measures the light, and lets just the right amount through. All you do is aim and shoot! Takes color slides, color snapshots, black-and-white pic tures. A remarkable camera ... at a remarkably low price! Camera $ 34 . 50 Flasholder $3'95 Ilte, Calm Countif Film Lab
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers