The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, December 11, 1959, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Industry Wants
LA Grads-Smith
The liberal arts student is attractive to industry because
he is trained to think in broad terms, J. Edward Smith told
students attending the Liberal Arts Career Day lecture last
Smith, assistant general manager of personnel and ad-
HUB Gambling
To Highlight
Las Vegas Nite
Gambling will be legal from
8 p.m. to midnight tomorrow
in the Hetzel Union ballroom
—but it’s not because of a
change in the Pennsylvania
laws.
Las_ Vegas Nile, sponsored by
the Town Independent Men and
Leonides councils, will feature
gambling with play money fur
nished by the house. Tickets at $1
a person are now on sale at the
HUB desk. The tickets cover ad
mission and $2500 in play money.
For those who like to “quit
while they’re ahead," a 10-minute
vaudeville show will be offered
every 20 minutes.
Racing forms will be given out
and a racing film will show the
results. The evening will end
with an auction, in which players
may bid for items with the
“money” they have won. Gifts
from movie stars, downtown mer
chants and TIM and Leonides
members, and gambling equip
ment from Las Vegas will be
auctioned.
Leonides members will act as
cigarette girls.
Speech Prof is Invited
To Attend Symposium
Dr. Eugene T. McDonald, pro
fessor of speech and director of
the Speech and Hearing Clinic,
was one of six speech patholo
gists from this country invited
to attend an international sym
posium on congenital anomalies
of the face and associated struc
tuies at Gatlinburg, Tenn., Sun
day through Wednesday.
The program was sponsored by
the Dental Study Section of the
Division of Research Grants, Na
tional Institute of Health, and
was attended by 125 interested
persons from this country and
Europe
★ CATHAUM
Now: 1:46, 3:44, 5:35, 7:33, 9:31
INGMAR
BERGMAN’S
"THE
MAGICIAN"
★ NITTANY
NOW DOORS OPEN 6:45
SAT. DOORS OPEN 1:15
CLASSIC WAR STORY
“FIGHTING 69TH”
JAMES CAGNEY
By AMY ROSENTHAL
ministration of the Armstrong
Cork Company, Lancaster, said
that many businesses preferred a
student with a broad undergrad
uate base who could be trained to
specialize with a company.
He listed four advantages that
accrued from a liberal education.
These are: a storehouse of facts
about men and things, the ability
to analyze a problem, put together
the facts, and come up with con
clusions. tolerance of other peo
ple's opinions and sound judg
ment.
Smith said the problems faced
by liberal arts students in try
ing to get jobs "center around
lack of career thinking and not
enough active job seeking."
The school can help solve these
problems by holding career coun
seling, job guidance programs and
placement seminars in the sev
enth semester. Smith also urged
greater cooperation between the
liberal arts deans, faculties, and
students and the school place
ment service.
The student must realize that
the task of getting the right job
is important and difficult. “Don’t
apologize for lack of experience
but pick out your strong points,"
Smith said.
He pointed out that many stu
dents have a "let nature lake
its course attitude" instead of
trying to sell themselves to
their prospective employers.
Smith said that for a successful
career an employe must have an
interest in his job, be willing to
work to improve himself, learn
to work as a team man, learn from
his mistakes, accept responsibil
ity, be loyal to the company, be
alert for opportunity and believe
in the free enterprise system.
Every year new things are dis
covered that will lead to more
and greater job opportunities,
Smith said.
"HIDDEN TREASURES"
REVEALS THE WONDERS OF
THE WORLD THROUGH THE
CAMERA AND MICROSCOPE
SEE LIFE IN A DROP OF WATER,
CRYSTALLINE (AVE FORMS, AND
MICROSCOPIC DESERT FLOWERS
TONIGHT, Schwab Auditorium, 7:00
ADMISSION FREE
1 CHRISTMAS CARDS
IS by
M -American (jrouji
The Pennsylvania Book Shop
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Religious
Traditional
Modern
$1.50 for 25 cards and up
129 W. Beaver Ave,
open every evening ’til 9 except Saturday
Student Affairs Stud'
Orientation Activities Rated by Frosh
By BARB YUNK
Fourth of Series
Meetings with counselors,
faculty and deans were rated
by freshmen as the most in
formative and well organized
activities of Orientation Week.
The purpose of a study con
ducted on 236 representative stu
dents by Student Affairs Re
search was to evaluate the effec
tiveness of the various activities
of the Orientation Week program.
Each student was asked to!
evaluate 15 activates as ‘'help
ful.” or “not-helpful.” The 15 ac-j
tivities to be evaluated were:
Sunday evening religious func
tion. President’s convocation, a
campus tour, meeting with a col
lege dean, individual meetings
with faculty members, meetings
with residence hall counselors,
television talk on the library,
IFCPA Names
New Manager
Mrs. M. S. Petnch has been ap
pointed manager of the Interfra
ternity Council Purchasing Asso
ciation, Robert Ritchey, IFCPA
president, said yesterday.
The IFCPA, a non-profit coop
erative fraternity buying agency
for food and household supplies,
did $20,000 worth of business dur
ing the ■ month of November,
Ritchey said.
The chairmen of five perman
ent Junior IFC committees have
ben anounced.
The chairmen and their com
mites are: Donald Giagnacova,
publicity: Robert Schettig, rush
ing: Robert Harrison, Greek
Week; John Butcher, scholarship;
Howard Glick and Robert Evans,
pledge banquet.
Film on Outer Space
A showing of the film “Hidden
Treasures” will be sponsored by
The Penn State Christian Fellow
ship at 7:30 tonight in Schwab
Auditorium. The color film fea
tures photographs of outer space,
subterranean caves and micro
scopic organisms.
guided tour of the library, meet
ing with upper class counselor,
song and cheer practice, college
mixer, fall sports program. Dink
Debut dance, class night and
talks by faculty members.
Tha results of the study
showed that the functions held
during the day were attended
by 87 per cent of the students,
while 80 per cent attended the
evening functions. This, the re
search committee felt, was be
cause the evening activities
I were of a social or entertaining
| nature at which attendance was
I not required.
! The students who rated the
j social affairs “not-helpful” were
(found to be those with high apti
tude scores.
The only activities which were
generally accepted as being value
less were the television talk on
the library and the song and cheer
practice. However, in the case of
Approve
All fraternities are approved
for the entertainment of women
guests tonight except Pi Sigmar
Upsilon and Pi Lambda Phi,
which are approved for tomorrow
night only.
Events approved for tonight are
Runkle and Lyons Christmas par
ty, Stephens Christmas party,
Grange Christmas party, E.U.B.
Student Fellowship Christmas
party, Newman Club Christmas
parly. Westminster Fellowship
Christmas party, Sigma Sigma
Sigma cabin party, Alpha Tau Al-
Sigma cabin party, Outing Club
cabin party. Alpha Tau Alpha
party at Alpha Gamma Rho, Kap
pa Phi Kappa dinner dance,
Thompson Sadie Hawkins dance
in Waring lounge, Nittany 26 unit
dance at Nittany 20 and Alpha
Chi Omega pledge dance.
Events approved for tomorrow
LAS VEGAS NIGHT
Sponsored by 7.1. M. « Leonides
SAT. DEC. 12,1959
8-12 P.M. HUB Ballroom
Tickets • * • • $l.OO
On Sale at HUB desk NOW I
The Dixieland
Jazz Conceit
by
Art Hades and Group
will be held in
Schwab Auditorium
instead of Recreation Bldg.
at 8 p.m. SUNDAY
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1959
the latter, 17 per cent felt that it
might be improved by better or
ganization and more student par
ticipation.
The television talk on tha
library received the most nega
tive reaction. Thirty per cent
of the students recommended
that it be eliminated.
In a study conducted on the en
tire freshman class, it was found
that 12 per cent .attended the
faculty talks. Ninety-five per cent
of those who attended indicated
that they should be continued as
part of the program. Students
who did not attend said that they
were not aware that the lectures
I were being offered or that Orien
tation Week was already too
crowded with activities.
The most persistent criticism
of the various activities concerned
the lack of organization in sev
eral events, crowded facilities and
lack of participation by students.
Activities
night are Cambria and Stephens
orphans Christmas party in Beam
Hall rec room, Penn State Outing
Club Christmas party, Penn State
Amateur Radio Club cabin Christ
mas party, Chi Phi skating party
at Hecla Park, Watts Hall date
party. Sigma Tau Mu party, Phi
Mu formal dance. Sigma Sigma
Sigma pledge dance, Phi Sigma
Sigma pledge dance.
Events approved for Sunday
night are Gamma Phi Beta
Christmas party at Acacia and
Baptist Student Fellowship carol
ing party.
Article by Williams
The Rev. Preston N. Williams,
acting University chaplain, is the
author of “A Christmas Medita
tion” published in the December
issue of The Intercollegian which
is published by the National Stu
dent Council YMCA and the Na
tional Student YMCA.