The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 29, 1968, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    , AGE SIX
LOWS GENTRY LESLIE V. DIX
`Are Your Eyes Open? Consumer Credit Code?
Professors
Over Term
"Corn Products Lectures in
Advanced Chemistry," a new
annual program sponsoring
five distinguished lecturers to
speak on areas of current
chemical interest during a
series of two-week visits, will
begin Monday at the Univer
sity.
Presenting the graduate
level addresSes in inorganic
chemistry, the topic field for
1968, will be F. G. A. Stone,
University of Bristol, Eng
land, April 1-12; M. F. Haw
thorne, University of Cali
fornia at Riverside, April 15-
26; L. F. Dahl, University of
Wisconsin, April 29 - May 10;
H. B. Gray, California Insti
tute of Technology, May 13-
24; and Fred Basolo, North
western University, May 27-
June 7.
Amateur Radio Club
Virgil Neilly, associate pro
fessor of engineering, will
speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday
in 214 Hammond at a meet
ing of the Penn State Ama
teur Radio Club.
Neilly, an amateur radio
operator, will speak and show
slides of his recent trip to
South America where he
visited many hams, and the
families of students from
South America who have at
tended or are attending Penn
State.
Consumer Interests
Consumer interests will be
discussed by two members of
the President's Committee
on Consumer Interests at. a
national conference to be
held Thursday through Satur
day at the University. Leslie
V. Dix will speak Friday on
prospects for a uniform con
sumer credit code and David
Shoenfeld will be the banquet
speaker Thursday. The con
ference is open to all in
terested in consumer prob
lems.
Future Homemakers
Two faculty members of
the College of Human De
velopment at the University
will take part in the 23rd an
nual conference of the Penn
sylvania Future Homemakers
of America, this weekend in
Pittsburgh.
Louise Gentry, assistant
dean for resident education,
and a member of the Presi
dent's Consumer Advisory
Council, will be banquet
speaker tomorrow even in g.
Her topic is "Are Your Eyes
Open?" referring to the teen
ager's role as a consumer.
Collegian Faculty Notes
Jeannette Lynch, assistant
professor of family economics
and home management, will
conduct a workshop tomor
row for the 200 FHA chapter
advisers,' all home economics
teachers in secondary schools.
The workshop, titled
"Drum Ming Up Decisions
with Dollars," is designed "to
help teachers look at some of
the positive and promising
things high schools are doing
in providing unbiased con
sumer education for young
people," said Mrs. Lynch.
Ideas for an elective course in
Consumer Education recently
planned by the State Educa
tion Department of New York
will be discussed.
Hisaisune in Japan
C. Hisatsune, professor
of chemistry, will attend the
Japanese Chemical Society
meeting tomorrow in Osaka,
Japan.
' He will remain in Japan on
sabbatical leave of absence
until Sept. 30, lecturing and
conducting research at the
University of Tokyo.
Biomechanics Research
Richard C. Nelson, associ
ate professor of physical edu
cation and director of the
Biomechanics Labo r a tor y,
will present a paper at - the
national convention of the
American Association of
Health, Physical Education
and Recreation tomorrow in
St. Louis, Mo.
Nelson's paper is entitled
"The Use of Stroposcopid-
Photographic Techniques 'in
Biomechanics Research." He
will also serve as a panelist
during a symposium on hu
man motion research.
Jordan in Paris
Joseph Jordan, professor of
chemistry, will attend a joint
meeting of the Commissions
of Electrochemistry and Elec
troanalytical Chemistry of the
International Union of Pure
and Applied Chemistry today
in Paris.
Jordan is chairman of the
Commission of Electrochemis
try which consists of eight
scientists from the United
State, Russia, France, Ger
many, Czechoslovakia and
Japan.
Lima To Talk with Borges
Robert F. Lima Jr., assistant
professor of Spanish, has been
selected as one of three panel
ists to take part 'n a special
"Conversation with Borges"
next Saturday at New York
University.
The panel will question the
* * Argentinian author Jorge Luis
Sherif on 'Black Unrest' Borges, who is currently serv.
Muzafer Sherif, professor ing as Visiting Charles Eliot
of social psychology, will be Norton Professor at Harvard
among the lecturers at a spe- University..
cial two-day symposium, this The new poems by Lima are
weekend at Georgetown Uni- featured in this month's issue
versity, of the national Delta Epsilon
DAVID SHOENFELD
Banquet Speaker
ork ,
Break
Sponsored by the National
Science Foundation, the pro
gram is being conducted un
der the auspices of the Ameri
can Psychological Associ.ation
and is designed to bring to
gether the country's leading
social scientists to stimulate
new interest in their major
areas of research.
Among Sherif's most sig
nificant -topics will be a dis
cussion of his recently com
pleted research and study in
to the current problems of
"Black Unrest as Part of a
Social Movement."
* *
Klaus To Attend
Symposium
E. Erwin Klaus, professor of
chemical engineering, will
serve as chairman for the Sym
posium on Chemistry Lubrica
tion to be held Monday and
Tuesday in San Francisco as
a part of National Meeting
of the American Che:nical So
ciety.
The symposium is jointly
sponsored by the Division of
Petroleum Chemistry and the
Division of Colloid and Surface
Chemistry.
Frankl To Present Paper
Daniel R. Frankl, professor
of physics, will present a paper
on "Non-Equilibrium Phenom
ena at Semiconductor Sur
faces" at a symposium on
semiconductor surface phenom
ena to be held Wednesday and
Thursday in San Francisco
sponsored by the American
Chemical Society Division of
Colloid and Surface Chemistry.
* *
American Chemical Society
William A. Steele, professor
of chemistry, will present two
papers at the national meeting
of the American Chemical So
ciety next week in San Fran
cisco. Steele - vill also serve as
chairman of a session of the
Physics-Chemistry Division of
the Society.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
C. THOMPSON STOTT
Metallurgy Award
Sigma Bulletin.
Entitled "Tale"
.and , "Love
Poem for Cathay," both works
are .also to be part of a new
book of poetry now in prepara
tion by Lima. Title of the book
is to be "Trae;:ings."
Academy of Science
E. Willard Mil—, professor
of geography and assistant
dean for resident instruction
and continuing education,- will
present a paper entitled "Some
Themes of the American Con
servation Movement" at the
42nd annual meeting of the
Pennsylvania Academy of Sci
ence April 12 in Harrisburg.
Miller has served is presi
dent of the Academy for the
last two years.
* * *
Metallurgy Award
C. Thompsoq Stott, ' assistant
vice-president in charge of steel
operations, Bethlel em Steel
Corp., has been chosen as the
20th recipient of the David Ford
McFarland Award for Achieve
ment in Metallurgy.
The award, given annually
by the Penn State Chapter of
the American Society for
Metals to an alumnus of the
Department of Metallurgy, rec
ognizes outstanding' achieve
ment in sorne aspect of the
metallurgical profession.
The award will 1. made at a
banquet to be held at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 4, at the Centre
Hills Country Club, 'tate Col
lege.
Following the banruet, Stott
will speak on "Progress in the
Iron and Steelmaking Proces
st, During the Past Decade—
U.S."
Frankl in Germany, Too
Daniel R. Frankl, professor of
physics, will be the agenda dis
cussion leader on "Electronic
Interactions" at the Battelle
Colloquium,on "Molecular Pro
cesses on Solid Surfaces" to be
held May 6 to u. in Kranberg,
Germany.
Quantum Theory
Gordon N. Fleming, assistant
professor of phySics, gave a
lecture last week at Boston Uni
versity entitled "Relativistic
Constraints on the Quantum
Theory."
* *
Heicklen on Pollution
Julian P. Heicklen, associate
professor of chemistry, w a s
speaker at the IBM Research
Center, Yorktown Height s,
N.Y., yesterday.
The subject of his talk was
(Continued on page seven)
Faculty Published
In Books, Journals
Earle , R. Ryba, associate professor. of metallurgy, is
the• author of a chapter on `•`lntermetallic Compounds" in a
book,' entitled, "High" Temperature Materials and Tech:
nology" recently published by John Wiley.
Ryba's chapter surveys the preparation, fabrication,
thermal properties, oxidation resistance, and mechanical
properties of many intermetallic compounds that melt
above 1400 degrees Centigrade
. and might be
.suitable for
high temperature applications in rockets, jet engines and
„
other spade-age devices.
'Mesoscale Wind, Field'
Carl W. Kreitzberg, assistant professor of meteor
ology, is the author of a paper, "The Mesoscale Wind Field
in an Occlusion," published in the Journal of Applied
Meteorology.
OEO Report
The University's • Institute of Public Administration
has completed a report, "Politics, Poverty, and Education,"
for the U. S. Office of Economic Opportunity.
The report is based on an 18-month survey of six
urban areas of the United States which was conducted by
Nicholas A. Masters, professor of political science.
The cities surveyed are Trenton, N.J.; Oakland, Calif.;
Columbia, S.C.; Durham, N.C.; Corpus Christi, Texas; and
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Italian Painters
A description by a 17th Century contemporary of the
works of two Italian painters has been published by the
Pennsylvania State University Press as "The Lives of
Annibale and Agostino Carracci."
Mrs. Catherine Enggass prepared the translation of
Giovarinia Pietro Bellori's famous art history. An intro
duction was contributed by her husband, Robert Enggass,
professor of art history.
Herendeen on Political Economy
A new book edited by James B. Herendeen, assistant
professor of economics, has' been published by Prentice-
Hall Inc. entitled "Modern Political Economy: Ideas and
Issues."
Purpose of the new publication, according to Heren
deen, is to provide a non-technical introduction to modern
economic theory and policy.
W. LaMarr Kopp, assistant professor of German, is
author of a volume recently published by the University
of North Carolina Press, "German Literature in the United
States,• 1945-1960." The study, through a detailed interpre
tation and evaluation of data presented in a title-list of
Italian spaghetti with meat 'sauce is served with tossed salad, Italian bread and
butter, coffee or tea for just $1.50. We think you'll like the new Herlocher's, where
fine food and pleasant atmosphere await your dining pleasure.
418 East College Ave.
Geirnan Literature
Herlocher's has a
splendid spaghetti sauce.
This is how we make it.
e brown 10 pounds of grovad beef and add 10
is of chopped onions, 6 pounds of chopped green
ers, and 6 stalks of .choPped celery. Then we let it
: slowly WI 1/2 hour.
We add tomato sauce, tomato paste, salt, peppet, gat.
salt,
oregano, and parmesan cheese, osta coot it slowly
.01 at least three bouts in an 18 gallon pot, stirring tegularly
with a wooden. paddle.
Finally we apply ample quantities to Tace high quality
alletti noodles.
English translations of German literature published in the
United States in the years after the close of the World
War 11, offers an anaylsis of the currency in this country
of German literature from the Middle High German period
down through the mid-20th century, showing its vigor
here immediately following the' cessation of hostilities be
tween the two countries.
Pioncare Generators
Gordon N. Fleming, assistant professor of physics, is
the author of an article in the Journal of Mathematics
Physics, entitled, "Structure of the Pioncare Generators."
Weidhaas Authors Textbook
The publication of the textbook, "Architectural Draft
ing and Design," by Ernest R. Weidhaas has been an
nounced by the Boston publishing house, Allyn and Bacon,
Inc.
Weidhaas is assistant dean for Commonwealth Cam
puses and head of the Department of General Engineering.
Designed primarily for the technical institute student
studying for a career as an architectural draftsman, this
book is thought to be unique in placing emphasis on
architectural design in addition to architectural drafting.;
Husband• Wife Team
Joseph H. Britton and Jean 0. Britton, a husband-wife
team of social scientists, are co-authors of a chapter in the
new book, "Older Rural Americans."
He is professor and head of the Department of Child
Development and Family Relationships, and Mrs. Britton
is an associate professor of education and psychology.
Published by the University of Kentucky Press, the
321-page monograph brings together for the first time
much of the research that has been done on the circum
stances of living of older people in rural America. Hereto
fore, most studies of older people in the United States have
focused on the aging in urban areas.
ADAY, MARCh 29, 1968
Free Parking Lot at Rear