PAGE EIGHT Health Conference To Note Progress The "Fabulous Fifties" will draw to a close with per haps the greatest advancement ever in public health protec tion, services, and education, at the completion of the Eighth Annual Health Conference to begin Sunday on campus. At the Conference an expected 900 official and nongovernmen tal health agent s, professional medical personnel and represen tatives of community groups will meet to discuss their accomplish ments during the past decade, and to sight objectives which will guide the activities of the future. Discussions will attempt to analyze the health needs of the people, the best ways of meet ing these needs, and providing for the best distribution of ser vices for conquering health problems. The main purpose of the con feience is 'ne in-service training of employees of the State Health Department, and education in re cent developments in public health. Other constituent groups will plan discusqons for annual pro grams, business meetings, com mittee meetings, and the like ac companying the educational feat u re, Social receptions, dances and tours, conferecnes and meetings, health tests., commercial and scientific exhibits, film previews and staff meetings of the Penn sylvania Department of Health are some of the activities plan ned by the various health groups which sponsor the Con ference. The first of two general sessions will be held on Monday with Johnl T. Farrell, Jr., M. D., president of the Medical Society of Pennsyl vania,l presiding. Addresses be given by Dr. . L. Wilbar, Jr.,! and Dr. C. Brock Chisholm on new concepts in public health. Dr William G. Mather, Read of the Department of Sociology, will , preside at the second general ses sion on Wednesday which will consist of a panel discussion mod erated by Dr. Herman E. Hilleboe, and an address by John Morgan Davis, Lieut., Governor of Penn sylvania I 1. opityjiß COMFORTABLE ROOMS IS) ll7iteColonial 40. 123 WNITTANYAVE STATE COLLEGE,PA. et b- MI with Running Wale or Private Bath-Parking t.: , intinniiiiiimurnimmilimionnumilimillini = =-- NOW OPEN _ = = 1- --- . 6 FULL DAYS = F-- A WEEK ..-... = 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m, Davidson's Barber Shop 145 S. Allen ;%iiiiiimininininnunimuniunnuninniummA tt .A . : ','`.' :Iv!' ' •-• '''' • • s -:' ‘• - ~.:;'. /filar ,;. . ,-, CE'''.._ 2 • • • i. V il t, ', 'lrlfjit 'N t o. ,;‹,, • ‘,..8 IT'S ~ , ~., i i.' . zr : HERE zy•t4.-..?' : •:,.• L: Yes, our new fall merchan dise is arriving daily so why don't you come down and browse around and get a load of the tremendous savings that are waiting for you. HABERDASHERY '7Jt' s in the Center of Pennsylvania' 229 S. Allen St. By CHRIS BELL Richie Given Military Post Col. Ellis B. Richie, executive officer in the Inspector General's section, United States Army Eu ropean Command Headquarters, will assume the duties of proles or of military science and tactics Monday. He succeeds Col. .Arthur W. Kogstad who was named to the Penn State post in 1956 and who .has been selected to attend the 11959-60 course at the National War College in Washington, D.C. Colonel Richie is a graduate of Southeastern College and has . completed work in educational ;administration at the University of Chicago and the University of Oklahoma. He is a graduate of the, Infantry School; the Command' and General Staff College; and Atomic Device School at Sandia Base, N M. His assignments have included I those of a company commander . in the 180th Infantry Regiment: and also commander of the Regi ment. Among his decorations are the Silver Star and Bronze Star Medal. Designed for 61() (ACTIVE) .8. 119 *, ‘IN A TEENS Vogue Reauly Salon 402 E. College Ave. Phone AD 7-2286 Specialists in contour hair-cutting „or IF :7\ Our specialty is an Italian Submarine Sandwich Come to Morrell's S. Frazier St. -- Opposite the Centre Daily Times SUMMER COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Rainbow Girls: Allow Morrell's to serve the biggest, best milk shake in town. You get not one, but three scoops of delicious Breyer's ice cream. r fs - 1) I ' „ And don't miss our taste-tempting PIZZA PIE 10" 12" For eat treats that can't be beat! 'Briefhand' Instruction Explained Shorthand based on longhand, is the current subject under dis-1 cussion at the University where' Dr. Theodore Yerain, professor at, Oregon State College, is demon-I strating the use of "Briefhand" to business teachers, in a short course which ends August 21. Said to have great possibilities] I for the recording of dictation or notes, Briefhand is a type of con centrated writing, based on the 'longhand alphabet, compared to the system of representation by, 'symbols, which has predominated the shorthand picture until now., lAs a hand-written form, this sys tern can easily be adapted to suit either office work or personal note-taking. The nine sessions presented by Yerain will cover Briefhand from learning and developing it to teaching it in such steps as - the learning of the alphabetic short hand system, the acquisition of skill development, the taking of dictation directly to the type writer, the adaption for television instruction, and special teaching procedures. Yerain is a past president of both the Western• Business Edu cation Association and the United Business Education Association, and a member of the national Policies Commission for Business and Economic Education, K' AtSr" , e" • el.t,' 4 N,17 47 1 4 4 , lic i , • L ~„. —. = German School Invites Prof To Fill Post Dr. Dagobert de Levie, asso ciate professor of German, has been invited to fill a teaching chair at the Pedagogical Academy in Gottingen, Germany, during, the Academy's winter semester which begins Nov. 1. He has been granted a six -I month leave of absence from the! University starting Sept. 1. The University professor is the first non-German citizen to re ceive this appointment. The ap pointment was made by the Min istry of Culture of Lower Saxony after an invitation had been ex tended by the director and fac ulty of the Pedagogical Academy. De Levie will give one course. on American life and letters and! will conduct a seminar on intel- 1 lectual currents underlying An glo-German literary relations in the 18th century. He also expects to be associated with the English department of the University of Gottingen. The U. S. Government has asked him to serve as a lecturer at a number of conferences and seminars to be held for Germany under the auspices of the U.S. Information Service. De Levie, who has conduct ed research studies in the field of 18th century German intellec tual history and literature for many years, w ill continue re search in this area while in Ger many. His major study will be of German morals in the 18th century. I - 1 1 , 5.P41 i WAY/ . i I 1 NN. : :, i it JE ''o i 218 E. College Ave. 1 ( + CLASSIFIEDS + '52 V-9 MERCURY convertible scats and windows. Good condition, sharp. Phone Hamtlton 2987 or write Box 1156. 1961 NEW MOON Trailer-36 ft., two bedroom, completely winterized. 81,400. See Trailer 28, Penn State Trailer Park. 1956 15' MOBILE Home, excellent con dition, completely set up with large lawn; 2 miles from campus. Very reason able. Available immediately. Call AD 6942. FURNISHED APT.. 3 rooms and bath Private entrance, in quiet home 11 toilet east of University on Route 322. $3O per month. Cali P.M 4-1144. GRADUATE STUDENTS, upperclassmen will find comfortable rooms with hot and cold running water or private bath. Colonial 'Hotel. 123 W, Nittany, State College. Central location. Quietly operated for rest and study. Low student rates._ LARGE, UNFURNISHED three room apartment and bath, also furnished efficiency. Central. Parking. Suitable for graduate couple. Call AD 7-7792 or AD 7-4850. Only 35c FOR SALE FOR RENT THURSDAY. AUGUST 13, 1959 Tuition Hike-- (Continued from page one) to be curtailed, much of gap between income and expenses will have to be closed by the University's only alternate source of instructional funds-- tuition fees," he wrote. Room and board charges for students living on campus will not be increased at this time, Walker said. The new tuition fees apply to graduate as well as undergrad uate students. Other adjustments of a minor nature will be in corporated into the schedule of credit hour rates for part-time and special students, Summer Sessions students and continuing , education registrants. The last rise in tuition came in 1956 when the fees were raised from $125 to $175 per semester for State residents. Papers to Be Presented Three papers by faculty mem bers and graduate students in the Department of Meteorology will be presented at the Conference on Stratospheric Meteorology to be held by the American Meteoro logical Society Aug. 31 to Sept. 3 at Minneapolis, Minn. Repairs Car Radios I Television Phonographs I Radios television Q. service 7 , ,1111 center State College TV 232 S. Allan St. WANTED DILL AND PEG—Troubles galore, with machines and on the floor. Come hitt goon if not before. RIDE TO San Franeieei) area. Leasing about Sept. 18. Willing to drhe. AB GIRL TO share apartment one block from campus with two secretaries. Call AD 8-6494 after 6 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS OUT OF state student want, to be adopted by Penna. reaidenta. Good at picking rocks. Gary GRAD STUDENTS—Sto.2k up on thesio supplies. Get everything you'll need in one one-stop store- Royal. Olympia, OH ‘etti typewriter rental 50^; rag content thesis paper. Multilith supplies, cotton and silk typewriter ribbon; for all niakem, models. Nittany Office Equipment, 231 S. Allen St: AD 8.6125. TYPEWRITERS CLEANED and over hauled, also minor repairs Special rates for students. Call AD 34odi. ENROLL NOW for Ballroom Dancing. Tap. Toe or Acrobatic lessons. Park Forest Village School of Dance. AD 8-1078.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers