PAGE FOUR SALLY DIM, of Delta Delta Delta sorority. who was chosen Sorority Woman of the Year by Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity. Trophy was awarded Monday night. Special Literature Conference To Bring Well-Known Scholars "New Frontiers for Comparatists" will be the theme of a special two-day conference here this weekend, focusing on emerging and hithertneglected liter atures. Guest speakers will include Willard Trask, nationally-known translator and visiting lecturer at Juniata College; George Anderson, chairman of the Eng lish Department at the University of Hawaii; and Albert Gerard, visiting pro fessor in comparative literature from the University of Liege, Belgium. Scheduled for Friday and Saturday in the Hetzel Union Building assembly hall the conference is being sponsored Inter-College Board Split By DENNIS STIMELING of all the University college member, assumed control of A constitutional amendment al- Collegian Staff Writer councils, but it has recently the meeting. It was generally lowing the vice presidents of The weekly meeting of the been plagued by withdrawals agreed that a more dynamic the individual student coun- Inter-College Council Board had arid threatened withdrawals. At president would be needed "to cils to sit on the council was an explosive start Tuesday Tuesday's meeting, two more move the ICCB into the active unanimously approved. night as President Sue-Terner councils threatened to "pull out sphere of the University." It was later announced that began the proceedings by offer- if the council doesn't begin to Mowry said, "For the past Mowry and Shall will compete ing her resignation. be active." five years this council has done for the vacant presidency. The "I am disgusted with this Genesis of Dispute nothing. Now perhaps we can election will occur at 'next organization,"M is s Terrier A fight over th e KCB's seat begin to move forward." Vari.- week's meeting by members of said. "It's purpose is to ex- on the Undergraduate Student ous members suggested that the council. change ideas of different stu- Government was partly respon- the ICCB should become more The new president will as dent councils and since it has sible for precipitating Tues- active in the field of academic sume office immediately and become political in nature, I day's crisis. Miss Terner said legislation. will have the responsibility of cannot retain this seat and I the council did not need the The council then proceeded choosing a representative for now resign as president." congressional seat. The vice to the business of the meeting. occupying the USG position. Miss Terner also said that President, Don Shall, who now her council, the Engineering holds the seat, felt such a Posiii - Student Council, was consider- tion was important for the ing withdrawal from the ICCB council's future. This led to because "the ICCB has done Miss Terner's charge that "the nothing and will continue to council is becoming too politii do nothing." cal in nature." The council was established After Miss Terner's action, as a forum for representatives Rich Mowry, senior board Students Recognized For Private Libraries Mrs. Dierdre H. Veley (12th-English-State College), has received first prize, a' $5O . certificate for books, in the Bth annual Personal Library . Competition for Undergrad uate Students. The competition, sponsored by the University Libraries and five local bookstores, is held in cooperation with the Amy Loveman National Award. Mrs. Veley's entry will be submitted in national competition for a prize of $l,OOO. Presentation of the prizes was made by W. Carl Jack son, director of University libraries, in a ceremony in the Penn State Room of Pattee Library Friday afternoon, with Ralph W. McComb, librarian for resource developments, presiding. Steven L. Jacobs (9th - secondary education Silver Spring, Md.), received second prize, a $4O certificate. Louise C. Shaler (9th-English-State College), third prize, a $3O cer tificate. Fourth and fifth prizes, certificates of $2O and $lO re spectively, were awarded to Joseph B. Englander (9th- English-State College) and Christine L. Nelson (6th-liberal arts - State College). ~,,il,^?2.,4,:*'..Zrrl•M.s"Ar'e. 70' ' 4. 1 ... , 4, :e'rir; • The -Daily Colt- LVS: HOT LINE Is Coming! "r - by the University's Program in Compara tive Literature. Also cooperating are the Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies, the College of the Liberal Arts, the Humanities Program in General Ed ucation, and the departments of English, German, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, Classics, and Speech. Trask, winner of a 1967 National Book Award for his translation of the Memoirs of Casanova, will open the program Friday evening • ith a talk on "Comparative Literature and the Un written Song." 'The lecture it scheduled for 8 p.m. following the presentation of awards for the annual. comparative litera ture essay contest by Kenneth D. Roose, Terner 'Disgusted,' Resi•ns Presidenc egsan '5 O'clock' Offers Student Play The Five O'Clock- Theatre The public tours will take Lehigh University will discuss will present an odainat play, place horn 2to 4 p.m. on both "How We Perceive Personality "Tin. Clock," by giutmate stu- Saturday and Sunday, to end Differences". dent Bob Deischer at t:2O p.m. this week's activities of the On Tuesday, two discussions today in the Pay& ‘n Theatre. College of 'Medicine Opening will be held. At 9:30 a.m., In Directed by Lucretia Bram- Convocation which started on 309 Sparks the topic will be lett, the ..:ast includes: Lisa Tuesday, to - aark the formal "The Rhetoric of Lyndon John- Brecibe.nner, Cla i r e Anne opening of the new medical son 4 ontrasted with the Rheto- Coyne, Linda Diehl, David school. ric of Adolph Hitler. At the Byrnes, RoY Laird, Linda Ma- • * * * second program, at 12:30 p.m., assen, Michele Peruzzi, John Coal Board Meets _ _ in 124 Sparks, the discussion Prettyman, and Eugene Welke. topic will be "Cross Cultural Scenit, and lighting uesign is by Communication." Barb Bilker. Admission to Five O'Clock Theatre performances is free. Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity announced last night the selec tion of Sally Diehl of Delta Delta Delts. as Sorority Woman of the Year. The award was made at a banquet Monday night. The four runners-up were Susan Hess of Alpha Gamma- Delta, Diane Clark of Gamma Phi Beta, Tart Hartzell of Delta Gamma, and Elizabeth Withers of Phi Mu. e=:=:l An invitation to the public to -tour the Basic Sciences Wing of The ?Ailton S. Hershey Medical Center of the University was issued by Dr. George T. Har rell, dean ad' director. dean of the college of the liberal arts. A self-employed free lance translator, Trask has been a visiting lecturer in the humanities at Juniata since last 311M men lie is best known for his transla tions of such works as "European Liter ature and the Latin Middle Ages" by Ernst Robert Curtius, and "Mimesis: The Representation cf Reality in Western Literature" by Erich Auerbach. The Saturday program will begin at 9 a.m. with a lecture by. Anderson on "Far Eastern Literature and the Limits of the Comparative Method," followed at 10:45 a.m, by Gerard's presentation on "Comparative Literature and Emer gent -Africa." by Conflict The Loin' Spoonful Susquehanna University, Selinsgrove, Pa. - Friday, May 10, 1968 8:30 p.m. _ Reserie seat tickets $4.95 and $4.50 Remittance and sett-addressed stamped envelope to: Lovire Spoonfur—Susquehanna University Selinsgrove, Pa. Tickets available at the door Jazz Club 12 Jazz Club Jazz Club WANTED: a bi 4.1 Majors in: —* Journalism Business a Advertising V For positions as JAZZ CLUB officers va N and executive board members. 0 There are also openings on the .., following committees: ..0 Promotion and Concert 2 Advertising Newsletter This 'N That Finance )•4 n a Applications are now at the HUB desk 'E.' —I, cr gni, zzar (Ina zzar qnl,, zzar win zzer ____ t===;, NATURAL CORDOVAN ANTIQUED, then HAND-BURNI S HED: Unlike any coloring available elsewhere. keit C Bostonlan Ltd. Cuy &nee S. Allen St., State College Around the canter from Jack Harper). Custom Shop lor*Men saaavmmvraesaax4ntaaavvmovraosamnavadarroovraesmixAno" THE DAILY' COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA The Coal Research Board of the Commonwealth will meet here from 8:30 to 10 a.m. Thursday and then tour the site of the Experimental Mine Drainage Treatment Facility under construction by the Uni versity at Hollywood in Hous ton Twp., Clearfield County. The treatment plant is fi nanced with grants of $700,000 from - the Federal government and &sem:* from the State. It will serve as a pilot plant for others in the State as a part of a research program 'directed by Harold L. Lovell at the University. The Faculty and Graduate Forum of ,the Department of Speech will sponsor three lec tures next week. At 7:30 pait„ Monday. at 12 Sparks, Robert G. Jones, professor in the De partment of Social Relations at Jazz Club Musk Many others Collegian Notes The role of government in science and engineering will be discussed by Rep. Emilio Q. Daddario, D-Conn., in a lecture at 8 p.m. Monday in Schwab. The lecture is the first of a series in the field of science to be presented under the aus pices of the Nelson W. Taylor Memorial Fund. Daddario. a member of the Committee on Science and Astronautics, is chairman of the Subcommittee on Science, Research and Development. Guido Neri, visiting profes sor of philosophy, will present a paper at the Philosophy Club colloquium at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Ifetzel Guinn Building assembly. ' Neri's paper is entitled, "The Concept of the Natural in Marx.,, A native of Milan Italy, Neri studied there and received his doctorate while in residence at Pavia. He concentrated in the area of contemporary Euro pean philosophy, specializing in art history and theory, phenomenology, and Marxism. His book, "Gabriele Galantara, Italian Artist and Socialist, 1865-1937," published in 1965, reflects the pattern of his thought. During his residence, Neri has taught philosophy courses and served on the humanities DEAN OMAN R. MacKENZIE staff. He is currently offering Beta Gamma Sigma President a course devoted to the study of Marx and modern Marxists. Ossian MacKenzb, dean of • • * the College of Business Admin- Nuclear Engineering istration was re-elected presi- The fifth presentation of the dent of Beta Gamma Sigma, Spring Term Colloquium pro- national honorary sr Ciety of gram of the nuclear engineer- commerce and business. ing department will be held at His re-election took place at 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, in 117 the biennial meeting of the hon- Sackett. The speaker will be (wary fraternity in Miami William K. Ergen of the Oak Beach. Ridge National Laboratory. His * * * topic will be: "Prevention of William Mangin, professor of' Major Nuclear Accidents." In anthropology at Syracuse Uni this presentation Dr. 'Ergen versity and former director of will discuss emergency core the Peace Corps program for cooling. Peru, will close out the 1968 The sixth presentation will be Latin-American Lecture Series. held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, in Mangin, who has been teach -117 Sackett. The speaker will ing at .Syracuse since 1954, will , .. P 1 KAPPA ALPHA 1 i ,announces i and congratulates i I its 1968 Dreamgirl . Paula Czaika i of pi Beta Phi 1 iP4VA ah, ' 4 4<"`44,, • ef, , 4 0:**k - 10 1 * -.TA;14#44.41114 , fay Mother Conies Through Again! Now it's your turn to remember her. Mother's Day is May 12; let Moyer's help you. • jewelers 416 E. College Ave. be William E. Price of the idiation Hardening Research Section of the Research & En gineering Division of Auto netics, a division of Nor th American Rockwell Corpora tion. His topic will be: "Radia tion Damage Problems in Spacecraft Systems." On Wednesday the student council of the College of Earth and Mit.eral Sciences will hold an award banquet at the Elks Country Club. Laurence H. .Lattman, professor of geomor phology, will be the speaker. The following awards will be Presented: William Grundy Haven Award to Thomas Koxa ($500), the Ellen Steidle Achievement Awards to David Lee Houck ($250) and William Boyer ($75), and the Jerome N. Behrrnan Award to Nelson (g1^0). speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday on "Urbanization and Migration to Cities in Latin America," in the assembly - room of the Nit tany Lion Inn. A coffee hour with informal discussion will follow. The series is sponsored by the Latin-American Studies Committee of the College of the Liberal Arts, and. the Institute of Public Administration. A graduate of Syracuse, Man gin received his doctor of philosophy degree in anthro pology from Yale University and ,pent four years doing field work in Peru. From 1957 to 1959 he worked with the rural migrants of Lima and also taught courses at the Institute of Ethnology of the University of San Marcos and the medical school at Arequipa. From 1962 to 1964, he served as deputy director and director of the Peruvian Peace Corps during which time he lectured at seven Universities in Peru. A. 0. Schmidt,_ professor of industrial engineering, an d Inyong Ham, associate roles sor, of industrial engineering, presented a synopsis of their papers at a Symposium of the American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers in Philadelphia on Monday. The technical presentation was on "Influence on Lathe- Workpiece Rigi di t Upon Flank-wear". . The synopsis covered flank wear on tools and dimensional accuracy; length-diameter ra tion of the workpiece; theoreti cal and experimental results; chiping of ^arbide tools due to chatter. * * * Attending Meetings Ernest C. Pollard, Evan Pugh research professor of biophysics and head of the department of biophysics is attending meetings of the Radiation Research Society in Houtton, Texas, this week. He will serve as chairman of a session on space radio biology. He will also present a paper entitled "Radiation Effects on Genetic Transcrip tion and Translation" with Sharon Davis and Patricia Weller, research assistants in biophysics. . 2:: State College,and Bellefonte IS l 't ,r_. 9 „ .OA-t,„ ':'...,s'-' L ' .. .:. ! . 14 , * , , • ‘ % l I ‘.: \ .... AV „ O 4: , ' .ai, 1 :1. 'Itt..IZNZI ‘1 . i,•: . :••,. , „„.„.,,,, , , _ " " W N'a.,.,...." 4• \ --N.:.,.. Nr. 14;e::...L1,- e';',;" • ~.% 0 ,,,,- : : --", tn--- : , ; --T • ..- Mother's Day May 12th our famous CUSTOMER SERVICES are ready to D elp you at no extra charge FREE GIFT WRAPPING We will wrap'l"rour gifts In bead. tiful paper and ribbon at NO COST. FREE MAILING SERVICE We will wrap your gift packages for mailing and mall- them at NO COST. GIFT CERTIFICATES So - lv'e all gift problems in attrac.' five folders.' Choose any value yon• THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1968 Stanley H. Rosen, professor of philosophy, has just pub lished an essay entitled, "Po litical Philosophy and Episte mology." The essay will be a chapter in the book, "Plato, Popper, and Politics," by R. Brumbaugh. Rosen is currently on leave of-absence from the Univer sity. ' Anderson Lectures at Pitt John M. Anderson, professor of philosophy, will present a paper entitled, "The Language of Being" at the Saturday meeting of the Heidegger So ciety at the University of Pitts. burgh, A Graduate Student Col loquium in the Geological Sci ences will be held from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in 26 ,Mineral Sciences. The weekend colloquium will in clude a total of 16 twenty-min ute talks. " A program of titles and times is available in the Department of Geology and Geophysics Of fice, 303 L eike. In addition, a Colloquium Banquet will be held Sunday in the Nittany Lion Inn. An ad dress entitled "A Predicted Earthquake Who Will Sur vive?" wil be given by Richard H. Jahns of Stanford Univer sity Alumnus Honored Frederick J. Close, 11, board chairman of the Aluminum Co. of America and a distinguished alumnus of the University, was honored Saturday for his con tribution to business by Beta Gamma Sigma, national honor society in the field of corn. coerce and business. He was one of five cited at a luncheon during the biennial convention of Beta Gamma Sigma. V. S. Stubican, associate professor of ceramic science in the Department of Mater ials Science, has returned from a sabbatical leave. He was visiting professor at the Technical University of Norway, where his lectur ing and research was spon sored by the Royal Norwegian Research Council. , , :~: R; ~,.« tnr