PAGE POUR - ounseiors Will Assist Students in Orientation New men students on campus will be assisted in their orientation this year by student counselors under a some what revised counseling program. Initiated for the third year since World War 11, the pro gram provides for "face-to-face" counseling. This means that students enrolled in one particular curriculum will be advised by counselor students in the same curriculum. The program is aimed at ac quainting the new students with the College, its regulations, so cial life, and general atmosphere. Under the direction of the ori entation counselors committee, the program calls for two meet ings during Orientation Week. Additional meetings will be scheduled if needed. At these meetings the student will discuss College problems with his coun selor. Freshmen To Tour Campus • New students will meet at 7 tonight at the intersection of the Mall and'Pollock road for a tour of the campus, to be conducted by members of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity. In case of rain, song practice will be held in Schwab Auditorium. The tour is part of the organ iiation's four-point program to help new students during Orien tation Week and to makc them feel at home. -The members—those men run ning around campus in arm bands who sew — to know the answers to all questions about Collr-fe life that one of the best ways would be to set up an informa tion booth at the head of the all. - Part three is a "visitation" pro gram in which members of APO will visit men in the various liv ing' units. ,Wearing of the arm bands awling inforMation booths) for two weeks after classes begin is the conclusion of the orientation program, but not of their activity. :A main project during the school year is sponsorship of the "Ugly Man" contest which is held in Spring Week. Proceeds from the affair are presented to the Campus Chest. They also help to solicit during the Campus Chest campaign. One of the most famous ser vices is their "Wear Out the' Walks" campaign, which last year succeeded in getting grass grown in many an illegal path. A service provided by the frat ernity that all students might re ceive some time before graduation is the buying of refreshments for students of • the College hospital. A member visits the Infirmary every night to take orders and run small errands for patients, You are invited AliencreJt sea Room CA Beautiful Colonial Tea Room °Air Conditioned 'Popular Prices at W. Beaver and Allen St. THE The meetings will be compul sory, the committee announced. The entire program is set up to aid the students and they must attend these meetings to derive any value from it, the group be lieves. Tours through buildings and around the campus will be con ducted by counselors to acquaint new students with the College grounds. Discussions will be held on religious, social, and academic activities. The committee, composed of students, has attempted to limit the groups of new students of 25 for each counselor so that the meetings will be more informal. Daniel DeMarino, assistant dean of men, working with the orientation committee as an ad viser, stressed the importance of such a program. These counselors will be the first people to meet the new • students, he said, and the impression the student gets may possibly determine his stay at 'Penn State. The committee met with the counselors last semester to train them in meeting with students. It will publish an orientation counselors' handbook in manual form for distribution to counsel ors. The committee was, appointed by All-College Cabinet to work with the dean of men to improve the counseling program. Joint groups will meet throughout the school year to select new coun selors, draft the training program, and get an evaluation of the en tire program. The committee will work through the various student councils in the selection of cap able students for counseling po sitions. to dine at the TEA 111.001 Vi THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Chapel To Begin 58th Year The beginnings of the volun tary Chapel services held each Sunday in Schwab Auditorium were in 1894 when Rev. Lawrence M. Colfelt, D.D., was appointed as the first official Chaplain of the College. Previous to his appointment it had been customary to depend upon the services of preachers living within accessible distances of the College, their services be ing available only when they could leave thetir own parishes. • Until 1927 both daily and Sun day services were compulsory but at this time the daily services were; discontinued and it wasn't until the Fall of 1930 that the compulsory feature of Sunday Chapel was abolished. More than 1000 students, be sides faculty and townspeople are in attendance regularly at the Sunday services where they may hear outstanding preachers and religious leaders from pulpits and theological seminaries of Penn slvania and the neighboring sates. Non-denominational and Prot estant in nature, the hour-long services are presided over by Luther Harshbarger, College Chaplain, and provide moments for meditation, songs, prayer, the reading of the Scriptures, and dedication through the offering. ''he College furnishes the budg et on which the Chapel operates throughout the year and a special committee appointed each year by the President of the College di rects the Chapel FROSH Buy and Sell Your Books At the B-X in the TUB Self - Service. Lowes Prices in Town Name your own price on books you sell. Opening Wednesday, Sept. 10 Penn State Book Exchange Student-Operated Non-Profit Book Store Collegian Five Days - As a means of informing students of campus news and activities and to give practical experience to journalism majors, the Daily Collegian, an all-student newspaper, is published daily Tuesday through Saturday. The editorial staff, divided into the senior, jllior, sophomore, and freshman boards, strives not only to present a complete, unbiased coverage of campus happenings, but also a roundup of national and international news from the Associated Press wire. \ The Collegian is one of few col lege papers free from censorship and control by the administra tion. Members of the junior and senior boards may not belong to either campus political party. The senior editorial board, com posed of 13 students who receive monetary compensation for their work, determines Collegian poli cies and decides what material is to appear. Members of the junior editor ial board act alternately as night editor, copy editor, and wire edi tor and write the news of major importance. Sophomore and fresh- CLASS of 1956 "KEEP A RECORD OF YOUR COLLEGE DAYS" Let your parents and friends at home follow Campus activities and Success of the Nittany Lions. SUBSCRIBE TIODAY $2.00 per Semester • 53.75 per Year Name - The Address DAILY COLLEGIAN Enclosed: Campus $2.00 Sem. ( ) $3.75 Year ( ) st a te college, Pa. • Your Headquarters for Official Customs. • FREE NAME CARDS Open 9 a.m. -- 9 p.m. MPNDNYt SEPTEMBER Pt, rg Published Weekly man boarders are chiefly head line , writers, proofreaders, an d minor news writers. A call for candidates, who do not need to be journalism majors, will be issued shortly. Meetings will be held weekly to familiar ize candidates with Collegian pol icy and style and to discuss the rudiments of news writing. For practice, the candidates will immediately begin working on the paper afternoons after four o'clock. Promotions to boards cor responding to class standing will be made later in the semester ac cording to the interest, effort, and ability the candidate has shown. The financial problems" of the (Continued) on page seven)