,SATURDAY. MAY 26. 1962 THIS WEEKEND ON CAMPUS Jazz Club The Jazi Club will hold its final workshop !of the year at 1 p.m. today on the Hetzel Union terrace. The Bob Napier trio will provide the Music: Elections will also be held. Members are asked to bring their membership ' cards so that they may vote. Student Encampment Applications for the 1962 Stu dent Encampment at Mont Alto are' due at 5 p.m. today at the HUB desk. • Bike Inspection Today is the last day that bi cycles =will be inspected and li censes issued in State College. In spection Twill be held, at the Municipall Building from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. and on campuS at . parking lot 46 from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The fee is 50 cents. Car Wash • A Car wash sponsored by the Arnold Air - Society and its aux iliary, Angel Flight, will be• held from noon to 5:00 p.m. today at the Wesley Foundation. The cost of the wash will be sUper car. Lecture , ;Marshall D. Shulman, associate director of the' Russian . Research Center of Harvard University and professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Inter national Ilow and Diplornacy, will speak at 'B_ p.m. Monday in the HUB assembly room on "What Does Russia Want: Recent Trends and Developments in Soviet For eign, Policy." Fadulty.LunCheon Club The Faculty Luncheon Club will meet at 12.30 p.m. , Monday In HUB dining room A. Angelo Cavell, warden of Rockview Pri son, will speak on "Custody Treat ment and Agricultural Industries -=-A Coordinated Program for Rehabilitation." New College Diner DcAnlcln to.cen ine"Movies Visit • The Historic -' Columbus Chapel and ' foal Mansion 4 mt. East on Rt. 322 10 - 6 Daily ..-Students 50c HIMI , COLLEGE MAN SUMMER JOBS Calendar FULL TIME WORK THIS SUMMER = I - EARN $4,000 BETWEEN MAY & SEPTEMBER Tonight . $l,OOO CASH SCHOLARSHIPS Movie . . . 9 p.m. / - Hiroshima Mon-kromi? EARN IN EXCESS OF $155 ' TRAVEL TO RESORT AREAS, PLENTY OF Supd4y TIME FOR BOATING, SWIMMING, AND GOLF LOX & Bagel Brunch • 10:30 a.m.; WM AN ALL EXPENSE PAID HOLIDAY TO Sponsors: Phi Epailoa Pi . 4 . LONDON FOR A WEEK - 1 .P.... - SOME QUALIFIED - -STUDENTS MAY - WORK iiidependents' OVERSEAS FOR THE SUMMER KOSHER HOAGIE SALE BASIC REQUIREMENTS: 7 - 10 p.m. I. OVER 18 YEARS OF AGE ioc per hoagie 2. AT LEAST 6,,MONTHS OF COLLEGE lOc f or Kg i a ' 3. NEAT APPEARANCE . ALL . AD 7-2408 lace your orders ' CTONNOTSEUSE THEIR TUDEN ASSOCIATION STUDENTS O A MAY W LIFY ITHUS ilei Fwindatien • IN NEXT SEMESTER ON A PART-TIME BASIS 4 Locust Lao ' PHONE PITTSBURGH, ATLANTIC 1.9355 I!! THE DAILY . COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA Other Events Today Sports Car Club Ratty* and Seavtrucer Hunt, 1:30 p.m. Beg ♦t rrsdullis firele apartments parking lot. Student films.. 7-11 Rm.. HUB amen* Tomorrow Freshman Class Advisory Board. 7:30 p.m. 202 HUB. Junior Claa Advisory Board. 1:30 p.m. • 21S HUH. Omega Psi Phi. 4 p.m.. 212 HUH. Student films, 7-11 p.m., HUB assembly room. Swedeoborpian, 40:20 a.m., 212 HUB. Mesphook 8 p.m., 212 HUH TIM Jam Session, 24. p.m., HUB halt- Monday Agricultural Economics . Club Picale, 4-1 p.m.. Sunset Park (north of North galls on McKee- Street). . Alpha Phi Omega. T p.m.. 212 HUB. . College of Education Faculty. 3:30 p.m.. HUB assembly morn,. College of Physical Education and Ath letics. 7 p.m.. White Hall recreation room. Engineering Mechanics Seminar. 4 p.m., 210 Hammond. Melvin A. Wilkov. as sistant professor of engineering me .chanies. Figure Skating Club. A p.m_ 217 HUB P.S. Bible Felkovmhip; 7 p.m.. 214 RUB Sigma Gamma Tau. 7 p m.. 203 ftUB. UCA. 7 p.m.. 213 HUB. Hatcher Writes Arabic Book By DIANE CROWLEY The first book on home eco- omics ever to be published in the Arabic language has been written by a University. professor of home economics education, Hazel M. Hatcher. Dr. Hatcher's book, "Adventur- 1 ing in Home Living," a junior, high school t extbook, covers suchl fields of home economics as! grooming, cooking, sewing, deco rating and , entertaining. PROBLEMS AROSE over thej Sections of the book dealing with' boys in the class or coed parties, since the Arabic culture does not' permit this. Dr. Hatcher said. 'ln; the translation, therefore, the boys! :re referred to only as "brothers," and the parties discussed are not mixed. This book has also been trans lated into German and Spanish, as has Dr:: Hatchets college text, - Teaching of Homemaking." _ • Marjorie East, head of home economics education, has had her book, "Display for Learning," Research Review Animal Behavior Studied By CLAUDIA LEVY ! structure. Biological and environ-, THE SURVIVAL of domestic Cat behavior, aggressive activ mental variables will be inyesti-, fish will be studied in the new ity of starlings and _problems of gated in this long-term problem budding by Edwin L. Cooper. as the domesticated trout are among solving project, Warren said. ;sedate professor of zoology, who the studies planned to be con- The behavior of birds and main- will use it as headquarters for ducted in the new Small Animal mats! which reflects the effects of research on the effects of differ- Building. aggressive activity on psychoto- ent environmental experiences on The Board of. Trustees has au- gicall processes will be investigated the early behavior of trout. thorized officers of the University under a project directed by David ' "We will try to determine if E Davis, professor of zoology. there is any wily of feeding trout to prepare plans, obtain bids and award contracts for construction -WE ARE CONDUCTING ex -, hatched in ;he lab different-kinds of this building,. which will be perments wtih starlings," Johrt of food so that they will survive located north of the Research Cen- Vandenburg. graduate student as. better in the wilds. l ' Cooper said. isociated with the project, said, "by There is • a problem involved ter on the east end of campus. controlling the number of hours with fish who are domesticated A $154,100 grant from the Na-' i o of light that a bird receives n o ne tional Science Foundation will aid and then released, he said. When in financing the estimated $308,2001' The starlings who get. less placed in streams and rivers, they cost of the building. light in the lab tend to be more do ff le quickly. 1 ' aggressive than the ones exposed IT WILL BE used primarily by to a longer day." ..... I • We hope to strengthen them the Department of Psychology in Experiments in which mice's re-'chances for s urvival by experi ' s the College of Education and the sistance to disease is lowered are nienting with different kinds of treatment, We also plan to take !Department of Zoology in the Col-:also being conducted. Vandenburg eggs from undomesticated trout lege of Agriculture. ,said, , hind will try to nurriure ' Joseph M. Warren, associate "Mice which do a lot of fighting,`,„,.„,,,, • in behavior patterns once professor of psychology, will con- have low resistance to bacterial ---*. the fish hatch," Cooper said. 'duct 'duct studies in the learning. prob- infections." he said. "The mice lem solving and social and emo-' which lose a lot of fights have low tional behavior of cats in the new resiitance," h - . added. 'Blue Ban d to Play The Concert Blue Band. ender the direction of James W. Dunlop, professor of music education, will present its annual ipring concert , at 3 p.m. tomorrow on the Library translated into Spanish and Jap- service of the United States and' ste P s. anese. the authors,tycewed little or no Some of the works which' the Miriam E. Lowenberg, head-of payrnent. band will play include selections the food's and nutrition depart-! JEAN D. AMBERSON. profes-frOrn "Mt Lucky" by Henry Man, mem, worked with Dr. Benjamin sor emerita of home economicsicim. Clifton Wilitams"*The Sinfo- Spock, well-known child psycholo m education, has played an impor. nians." Livingston C ea rha r is gist, on "Feeding Your Baby and tant role in furthering home et-0- "Beguine for Band," and Giuseppe Child," which has been printed,nomics education in Formosa, Verdi's "Nabucco " in Portuguese, Swedish, Italian,where she taught for three years' This is Dunlop's fifteenth year and two French editions. at the Taiwan Normal University,. as conductor of the band. Ile veil( Difficulties arose when not only , Dr. East said.. Dr. Amberson also he assis ted by Andrew Chris. the text but the names of foods;published a home economics news -,tins, j j , graduate student in music had to be changed to meaningful letter when she was in Formosa.• education from Fredonia, N.Y . terms for foreign consumers, Dr. Lowenberg said. - 'Dieticians in each of the foreign' countries were ' asked to work with the translators and to find, .suitable substitutes for the Ameri- ' can foods ) Publishers in the foreign coon-. tries first received copies of these 'books through the United States 'lnformation Service, . and after !receiving permission from the' 'professors, translated the books] .The process took two' or' three i years in some cases, Dr. East said.; Publication of the books were' usually considered a good will' I • . the fourth dimension: TIME ... still a mysterious concept to science. Time is only an idea, an abstraction ... an area of shadow, speculation—and surprise. MAN WAS CREATED AFTER 11:59...if all time since the earth's creation were condensed into a 24-hour day, the "Age of Mail" wouldn't start till 2 seconds before midnight! Even the dinosaurs wouldn't appear until tt p.m. '. 'I- :: ~- f. . .. - • ..... ' - ‘4 O .- avi. , lie: a• oorbov- Aisit TIME TO GO ASHORE ... for the grunion, a California fish. Is highest tide of April, May or June. It rides the surf to the back dip a hole, deposits eggs and. sperni. Netiler ations develop without Tear 'being washed away until next highest tide, full month later. COACCURACY or Hamilton watches dPperids OR mi aow:4E preasmn. Fog instanCe, an important screw in a Hamilton iS 032', king. weighs 16 milkeths of an ounce. and has 254 threads per inch. Two products of suds precision are illustrated bilow. A Hamilton is one of the few really fine possessions that will last fora lifetime. See one on your writ. The Hamthon Watch Company, Lancaster, Pa. PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers