PAGE EIGHT Radar Keeps Track Of Migrating Swans Because of the danger to private and commercial avia tion, University radar observers are cooperating in track ing the migration of some 60,000 whistling swans. "The birds are leaving their winter grounds around Chesapeake Bay and flying toward northern Canada where they breed," according to Larry G. Davis, assistant profes sor of ineteorology, who is directing the radar search here. Cruise at Great Heights Whistling swans cruise at such great heights that they often pass unnoticed by the human eye, but these very heights put them on a: collision course with planes. Last year, for exainPle, a swan in the Chicago area crashed through the windshield of a small plane. Since an adult bird is 4 1 / 2 feet long and travels at a speed of some 50 miles per hour, his. impact can be considerable. Prior to that, 17 persons were lost when a Viscount crashed over Cleveland, Ohio, after a swan sheared off the aircraft's tail gear. Also cooperating in the project, which was initiated by William W. H. Gunn, of the Canadian Wildlife Service, are the U.S. Weather Bureau's radar installations in Washing ton, D.C., and Buffalo, N.Y. These are directed by Stuart G. Bigler, a 1952 Penn State graduate. Observers in London, • Ontario, will track the birds through Canada. Departure March 15 "Last year migration got underway about March 10," according to Davis, "but this spring's bad weather has de layed it. An observer stationed at Chesapeake Bay 'alerted us when the birds began their departure March 15. He is also taking a count of them as they leave." - En route to their destination, \the high-flying swans make several stop-overs, the first 'of which is normally Lake Erie. Another observer there is counting the, arrivals to see how many made the journey safely and how long they took. Radar observers will try to pick out the exact flight path, the altitude of the birds and their speed. Penn State, which is operating on a three-shift, 24-hour-a-day schedule, has a unique automatic tracking radar so watch ers can look on and track individual birds. In Canada Next Month "Because of their late start, the birds are not expected to reach Canada until early April," Davis said. "They seemingly have some inherent sensitivity to the right kind of weather in which to fly. "They will wait until the winds are out of the south east to pick up a tailwind to help them travel north. If the weather is turning bad, they'll alight and wait for it to clear." The flight of the swans is in three sections, one fol lowing the Atlantic Coast, another the Mississippi Valley, and the third, the Pacific Coast. "This gives them ample opportunity to come into con tact with heavily travelled jet routes," Davis pointed out. "If we can determine what kind of wrather stimulates the birds to fly, and then clock their altitude, velocity and path, we can alert pilots to impending hazards." Comparatists To Hear Gerard, Tshcumi in May "New Frontiers For Com paratists" will be the theme of a special two-day conference sponsored by the Department o f Comparative Literature, May 3 and 4. The conference will cap a series of spring events planned by the department that will feature lectures on Wednesday and on Thursday, May 2. Albert Gerard, international ly-known specialist in African literature, who is currently serving as a visiting professor at Penn State, will open the pr)gram Wednesday with a lecture on "Mannerisms to Baroque: Shakespeare's 'Troi lus and Cressida' and Lope de Vega's Tuentevoejuna." Gerard from Belgium Author of more than 100 books and articles in the field of literature, Gerard came to Penn State from the University of Liege, Belgium, where he was a member of the faculty and received his doctor of philosophy degree. He also served seven years as professor and member of the administrative commission for the University of Elizabeth ville, the Congo. Tschumi from Switzerland The May 3 lecture will fea ture Raymond Tschumi, head of the Department of English, Hoch Schule, Et. Gallen's, Switzerland. The two-day conference, de signed to study some of the emerging and lesser known lit eratures will feature Gerard; George Anderson of the East- West Center of the University of Hawaii, discussing oriental• lit erature; and Willard Trask, lecturer in the humanities at Juniata College, who will focus on comparative literature and the unwritten song. Trask did the translation of Auber ba c h's "Memesis," a book of criticism. He is also in the process of preparing a 12-volume translation of the memoirs of Casanova. MEMBERS OF Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, help out the 1968 Easter Seal Campaign. From left to right are Dick George, John Curtis, Bruce Benninger, and Ken Walbert. Phi Kappa Phi Issues Over 361 invitations The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi has issued invi tations to more than 300 juniors and seniors and 61 graduate students whose out standing academic records make them eligible for mem bership. These candidates consti tute the top three per cent of the junior and senior classes in academic achievement, and one and a half per cent of the graduate students, who were nominated by their major de partments. Giving to the U.S.O. is not an act of absolution. It will not even y 4? your debt to the young Americans around Me world who serve us in the cause of freedom. Give not because of what your gift will do for you, but what it will mean to them. Give because every U.S.O. club is a friendly arm around a lonely shoulder, far from home. Give because every visit of a traveling U.S.O. IS HE ON YOUR CONSCIENCE? WHY DID /ETNA SPEND ALMOST ONE MILLION DOLLARS LAST YEAR IN SUPPORT OF HIGHWAY SAFETY? It makes sense to reduce auto accidents. Everybody bene fits. Fewer mishaps mean fewer claims. And fewerclaims help lower automobile insur ance rates. More important, It's good cor porate citizenship. /Etna Life & Casualty is a leader in the business. And we think it's up to us to act like it. We've made an honest effort over the years. ktna became one of the thir- Today, one out of every seven Our concern is people teen founders of the National high school students in the Safety Council in 1913. country who complete a driver THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Phi Kappa Phi was found ed in 1897. The Pennsylvania State College chapter was one of the three original chapters which formed the national or ganization. There are now 97 chapters, at least one in all but six states and one in the Philippines. The total mem bership has grown to over 160,000, of whom about 10,000 are still active. The new members will be initiated in a ceremony pre ceding the annual Phi Kappa Phi banquet early in May. show is a word from home that says "We care!" Give because 3 1 / 2 million Americans need the friendship and services that only V. 5.0. provides. Give to U.S.O. through your United Fund or Community Chest. U.S.O. gets no government funds, depends entirely on private contributions. Someone you know needs U.S.O. Later we helped organize the Insurance Institute for High way Safety. And we were the first to de sign a device to test driver reaction time. Each year /Etna engineering But our concern is people. services help the drivers of thousands of trucks, buses and other commercial vehi cles improve their safety ga l records. 'Eine ies for Library' If a library archivist were asked to compile a list of "Pub. lice Enemies," he would un hesitatingly name two.. Number ,one is that group of heirs who' unconcernedly dis card as junk the papers and collections assembled by their forebears. &cone. comes those well-meaning re:atives wh o "clean up" or censor the manuscripts of a deceased loved one. Charles W. Mann, chief of special collections at the Uni versity, has met both these types in the course of building up the library's holdings. Only a Picture "I vividly remember track ing down the descendants of President William McKinley's press secretary," he said, "only to find that all they had bothered to save was an auto- 1 graphed picture of the Presi dent. Any correspondence had been tossed out." Fortunately for both Mann's peace of mind and the library's acquisitions, many people do hang onto materials, and they can be induced to place valu able documents in the library for safe keeping. "We are concentrating," Mann explained, "on building up archives which relate to Pennsylvania or Penn State fig ures. I'm certain many inter esting papers are still lying around in dusty attics. Less Competition "Although University librar ies and private col'..ectors com pete strenuously for rare books and literary material, there is much less in-fighting in the realm of historical material. Indeed, Pennsylvania's we 11 known author-historian, S. K. Stevens, maintains we don't have enough archives to hold 'all the documents which need o a t .4. 0 eo4lNev education course are being trained on the first successful classroom driving simulator— the /Etna Drivotrainer System. Our business may be selling insurance. LIFE 6 CASUALTY Archivist Describes Two Types to be preserved." • While the bulk of archival material at Penn State is of interest mainly to scholars, there are a number of collec tions which throw fascinating sidelights on history. , ' "Recently, fo r example," Mann .noted, "we were given the papers, of Robert Jackson by .his descendants in Clear field. Jackson founded the Al legheny Mountain He alt h Farm, which later • became Cresson Sanatorium. Emerson, Thoreau "In addition to his corres pondence with such distin guished figures as Thoreau and Emerson, we discovered a note book reporting the results of a physical examination at the Health Farm on Charles Sum ner, the Massachusetts senator and leader of the anti-slavery forces. "In 1856, Sumner was vio lently caned on the Senate'floor by a Southerner incensed by a speech in which Sumner had attacked the South and insulted one of his cousins. Sumner maintained the beating so af fected his health that he was un• ble to resume his seat for four years. His opponents, how ever, claimed he was malinger ing. "The results of Jackson's ex amination," Mann pointed out, "prove conclusively that Sum ner was not faking, that Le was lucky even to be alive." Bernard Papers Mann's model for a collection guaranteed to keep any archi- Which way? When you live and provide a service in the State College area, you usually have to make a choice. Which way to grow? Serve the students or the townspeople. Fashionable as one-way streets are becoming, we take exception. We feel we can serve both. With the services that both want. And deserve. Maybe that's why we have so many customers on both sides of the street. Because we're not one- Campus (ferias FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 vist happy is the papers of the late Penn State sociologist, Luther Bernard. Bernard never threw anything away, and two trucks were required to trans port his papers to the library. "Researchers have been go ing through them for ten years," Mann sL.id, "and they are still turning up valuable historical materials." Modern homes, lacking the capacious attics of yesteryear, not to mention modern wives, discourage this kind of collect ing. But Mann as least hopes to make people think twice be fore they throw away what ap pears to them to be nothing but paper scrap. Their "rubbish" could one day rest in splendor in a li brary's archives. one ten east beaver avenue