TUESDAY. MAY 24 'Dead Camp It's quiet, the Assembly room pened? Has ever It's Dead Week. For those of Col leg i To Pub All Su While weary s a vacation, the C continue publica news affecting th throughout the months in the semi-weekly Summer Collegian. The Summer Collegian will be! published every Tuesday and Fri day from June 14 through Sept. 2., It will be distributed on campus and mailed anywhere in the coun try for the subscription 'nice of $l. Subscriptions may . be made by sending name, summer address and $1 to The Daily Collegian, Box 261, State College, or by, stopping at the Collegian office t in Carnegie Building. The Summer Collegian will, carry campus news, national and i international wire news, features, editorials, columns, cartoons and the same regular coverage as The Daily Collegian. . Twenty-four issues will span inter- mid- and post-sessions. Students interested in working on the editorial or business staff of The Summer Collegian may contact the editor at the Collegian office after 4 p.m'. daily or at UN 5-2531. Dusinberre Talks on Highway Deaths By CAROL KUNKLEMAN "Public saftey agencies de plore but don't seem to under stand public apathy toward safety legislation," observed Dr. R. K. Y. Dusinberre, Rit enour Health Center physi cian, speaking on fatality rates on our highways to the Faculty Luncheon Club yesterday. Offering a solution towards solving this problem, Dusinberre listed three areas which account for the public's attitude: First, there are obvious inconsistencies in the methods used by safety agencies. "The public isn't going to support safety," he said, "if truck weights are being increased and speed limits are also being raised." Second, continued Dusinberre, there is a confusion of interest between the public and the pri- Britton to Participate In Gerontology Meeting Dr. Joseph H. Britton, professor of child development and family relationships in the College of Home Economics, will participate in a mee tin g in Chattanooga, Tenn., from Saturday to Monday. This meeting will be an evalu ation session of the Inter-Univer sity Council on Social Gerontol ogy. 220• A S. ALLE Week' Brings s to Standstill By ANN PALMER all is empty, the SGA office and the HUB ck their characteristic buzz. What has hap one vanished into thin air? Of course not! 'ou who are unfamiliar with this term, it is the period of time immediately before the beginning of the exam inations. Various extracurricular groups on campus are urged to participate in as few activities and hold as few meetings as pos sible. ish mer Dead Week is sponsored by the Freshman Council and is supported by the Women's Stu dent Government Association. This period of little campus commotion will continue until 'Saturday, the first day of exam inations, and will give everyone 'a chance to cram for those fast approaching exams. Recently the Freshman Coun ,eil sent out approximately 60 let ters to organizations on campus. Eleven have replied that" they will participate fully in the Dead IWeek program and others have said that they will participate as completely as possible, which ,m6ans a few but not many meet ings to, attend. udents take llegian will Lion of all University summer - Canipus organizations which will support fully the Dead Week program are SGA, Busi ness Administration Council, Freshman Advisory Board, Del• phi, Mineral Industries Council, Hillel Foundation and Phi Chi Theta. Sororities which have said they will give complete support to the program are Phi Sigma Sigma, Phi Mu, Sigma Delta Tau and Kappa Delta. AEC Research Grant A grant of $17,557 from the Atomic Energy Commission will be used by Dr. Karl Gingerich, assistant professor of chemistry, for research on high temperature properties of titanium and zir conium phosphides and related re fractory materials. vate concern. "No driver wants to sacrifice his personal interest for public protection," he declared., Third, Dusinberre said, this conflict of interests between public and private concerns has been blurred over the years. Citing as an example the fact that Harold Curtis, president of the General Motors Corporation, was also head ofia safety commit tee for President Dwight D. Ei senhower, Dusinberre said that we must expect public apathy if these "contradictions" are pres ent in our society. "The modern highway is a men's club," Dusinberre declared. "Traffic represents man's inter ests and reflects his personality, especially in his use of speed," he said. The 68 million men drivers do not believe women are in- Sommerfeld to Speak Edna Sommerfeld, assistant dean for Commonwealth campus es and continuing education in the College of Home Economics, has been invited to speak , at a school meeting in Baltimore, Md.. tomorrow. Factor, Authorized VOLKSWAGEN thlea—Parto—Bervics New 'llO Delos, -Sedan --___slll26. WYNO SALES CO. MO E. Third St. Willietneport, Pm. Phone 1-4681 For that cool casual, carefree summer hairdo. ST. DeVidoes AD 8.0213 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA DZ, Pi Phi Tie For Derby First By 80881 LEVINE The rains came, the bikes wen an' fearless riders drove on through the storms. When the showers ended and the soaking score sheets had been collected the judges announced that Pi Beta Phi and Delta Zeta sororities had tied for overall first place in The Daily Collegian's Bicycle Derby Day held Saturday. Undaunted (though slightly dampened) by the whole affair, Drowning Denny Malick, fearless former editor of the sponsoring paper, sputtered that a runoff is tentatively scheduled for 6:30 p.m. tomorrow. It will be a team relay race held on Pollock Rd. between the dead end signs near the Mall in a space commonly referred to as Penn State's Gaza Strip. The tie occurred because Pi Phi took two first places in the' 8 O'Clock and the Deadline Races worth 25 points apiece, and Della Zeta took two firsts and a sec-' and in races requiring less team participation. They piled up 20 points for the Bluebook Race, 10 points for the Pinmate Race and 15 points for the Paperboy Race giving them also a total of 50 points. Winners of the individual 'events were: Eight O'Clock—Pi Beta Phi,' first; Gamma Phi Beta, second;' and Alpha Xi Delta, third; Blue- ; book—Delta Zeta, first; Alpha' Chi Omega, second; and Alpha' Epsilon Phi, third. Paperboy—, Delta Gamma, first; Delta Zeta,' second; and Gamma Phi Beta,! third. Pinnoate—Delta Zeta, first; Zeta Tau Alpha second and third. Deadline—Phi Beta Phi, first; Al pha Xi Delta, second; and Delta Gamma, third. Complete details on the runoff will be published in tomorrow's Collegian. terested in safety, he told the group. Women are appealed to because they are organized in clubs and civic groups, Dusin berre said. Advocating the use of radar on, highways to detect speeding, the: physician said that if the two million women drivers in Penn-, sylvania would write to their con gressmen, legislation would event ually be passed. "Put a very good 'back-seat driver' in the car and measure the anxiety she has when a man 'drunk' with the power of the machine is driving," Dusinberre said. Only then, he concluded, can 'we know what test to give to measure the need for safety legis lation. Major Biddle Will Speak At Dedication of Wagner Maj. Gen. A. J. Drexel Bid- the work of the sculptor, Horton die, adjutant general of the Smith, for the foyer of the new Commonwealth of Pennsyl-i ,building. Biddle, who-served as minister vania, will speak at thededi-Ito Norway, ambassador to Poland, cation of Wagner Building at'and interim ambassador to France 12 p.m. Thursday. as well as in other posts with the diplomatic service, has been the The building, constructed by the j Adjutant General of Pennsylvania General State Authority at a cost tsince 1955. of nearly $1.2 million, has been Dr. Eric A. Walker will speak named for the late Lt. H, Edward on the naming of the structure. 'Wagner, a University honor stu-IMaj. Gen. J. C. Frank, a graduate dent and student leader who was, of the University who is now with killed in action in France in 1944 .1 the US. Army Reserve Center at It will provide facilities for thelHarrisburg, will also speak Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC; A. J. Caruso, executive direc ; programs at the University. ltor of the General State Author ; Among the participants in the ity, will present the building to (dedication will be the late Wag- 1 the University, and J. B. Long, of ,ner's brother, Karl B. Wagner, also, Blue Bell, as president of the a University graduate, of Austin,;Board of Trustees, will accept the !Texas. He will present a placque,' building. WANTED!! New Froth Next year's staff still has room for Artists, writers, Ad men, Writers, TONIGHT ' s Z :—' -`,. 6* „, i . A future as exciting as the jet age itself can be yours . . . as a . TWA AIRLINE HOSTESSI 4 l' \ • TWA the nation's leading airline will train you at company expense ... and pay you while you train! First on your flying schedules will be interesting cities in the U. 5.... later you may fly to world famous cities of four continents on TWA's international routes. APPLY NOW for TWA training classes starting soon. Here are the qualifications: Minimum age 20; height, 5'2" to 5'8"; weight, 100 to 135 lbs.; vision, 20/100 or better, cor rected to 20/20; attractive; natural color hair; clear complexion; unmarried; 2 years college or equivalent business experience. Contacts Mrs. Wilma Boyd Every-other Thursday beginning April 7, 9 A.M.-4 P.M Trans World Airlines 100 Farmers Bank Building, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania TRANS WORLD AIRLINES CANDIDATES for the Circulators, Promoters, Last chance . . . 7:00 P. M. 203 HUB WRITERS ; WRITERS!!! PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers