( Today's Weathers Sunny and Mild VOL. 55. No. 17 Windcrest Trailers Will Be Vacated The Windcrest area, now containing 17 remaining trailers, will probably be vacated, by the end of the academic year, Otto E. Muel ler r -director of ' housing, said recently. The Windcrest area was. veterans and their families Mueller explained that the tra: Customs Band To Organize Af Nittany 20 Customs violators composing the freshmen band will meet at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Pollock road and Nittany Dorm 20. Violators required to wear signs to the game will also meet with the band. The entire group will form a pre-game parade to Beaver Field. The parade will start on Pollock road and continue on Burrowes road to Recreation Hall. The band was originally to perform during halftime ceremonies. Hugh Cline, co-chairman of Freshman Customs Board, said freshmen must wear their dinks to the football game. No freshmen will be admitted without dinks. Any freshmen who have lost their dinks can sign a master list at the Student Union desk in Old Main until 5 p.m. today. These students will be admitted to the game, Cline said. Veterans will need their draft cards to be admitted to .Beaver Field tomorrow. W. Va. Tickets Near Sell-Out A complete sell-out of perma nent stand' seats for the Alumni Homecoming game with West Vir ginia was announced yesterday by the Athletic Association. The 28,720 permanent seats in Beaver Field were filled by the end of the second day of general sales. Tickets went on sale to stu dents and townspeople Wednes day morning. About 2500 tickets for the tem porary end zone bleacher seats will be sold at $2 at the Athletic Association ticket office, 248 Rec reation 'Hall. Attendance at the game next Saturday is expected to top the previous high of 30,321 set at the Michigan State game in 1951. Today is Dead Sine For ÜBA Refunds Today is the last day students may claim money and unsold books at the Used Book Agency m the Temporary Union Building. Paul Hood, ÜBA manager, an nounced yesterday no checks for unclaimed money would be mail ed this year. In other years some students had been given money without their receipts and then when the slips were found, re ceived a check in the mail, there by collecting twice. Unsold books not claimed with in 30 days become the property of ÜBA, Hood'said. ÜBA will be op en 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today. Seating at Games Will Not Change The student seating arrange ment for home football games will not be changed this year, contrary to rumors circulating around campus. Harold R. Gilbert, assistant ath letic director said yesterday the same seating arrangement used for the past two years will be con tinued. Under this arrangement fresh men sit behind the north goal posts with the sophomores, jun iors, and seniors seated in that or der up the..east side of. the field. STltp Satly fSi| (Eoll originally set up to house World War II during their studies at the University, .lers were now more than 10 years old. and that it was no longer practical to maintain the com munity, because upkeep on the trailers cost more than the trail ers. The plan to vacate the com munity began four years ago, af ter the number of trailers in the area had been reduced. The Wind crest area formerly extended from the area between Bollock Dormi tories and the two Women’s dorm itories to College avenue. The re maining tenants .now live in the area behind McElwain Hall. Applications are not being ac cepted for new assignments in the area, nor may present tenants sub* lease their trailers. Operating practices, maintenance, and ser vices are continuing under pre viously existing policies, with no change l in rent schedule. There is a uniform rent of $2B a month. There have been no new tenants for the last four semesters. , The University developed the trailer plan for the veterans in October, 1945, when 93 trailers were made available by the Na tional Housing Administration. The trailers had been built in 1941 originally as defense housing for war workers in New Castle. Later the University acquired trailers from other defense hous ing communities, mostly from the Baltimore, Md., area. By 1947, 253 trailers had been provided on cam pus by the Federal government, and more than 50 privately owned trailers were /provided. More than five years ago main tenance became a problem. Parts of vacated trailers were salvaged for the upkeep of others, Mueller said. Since 1945, the veterans have completed their studies and va cated the area. Maintenance be came the responsibility of the married students and veterans who later occupied the area. In the fall of 1953 only 49 trailers remained in the area. - The area formerly had a com munity bath house and laundry, comprised of three trailers for the purpose. It has become impossible to continue upkeep of the unit. Trailers have a useful life of eight years as a general rule, Mueller said. . Vacating tenants have been in-- structed to salvage such fixtures as electrical appliances, windowsj, sink, and usable plywood. The shell of the trailer will be burned. The University has an agree ment with the Federal govern ment not to sell these units for housing after the Windcrest area has been discontinued. Ike to Give More Speeches for GOP DENEVR, Oct. 7 (ff)—Pres ident Dwight D. Eisenhower, heeding party calls for help, decided today to step up his personal campaign for a Re publican Congress by making at least one more major political address than he had planned. The chief executive will go that far, Vice President Richard M. Nixon announced at the Denver White House after conferring with 'Eisenhower, but still is de termined to do no barnstorming for individual GOP candidates in the November election. And Nixon told a news confer ence that in his opinion the Presi dent’ has been and will continue to play “exactly the right role” in what several GOP leaders have termed a tough fight to maintain Republican control of Congress. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 8. 1954 Education Policy Revision Asked Recommendations to strengthen general education at the University were presented to University Senate yesterday in a report by the subcommittee on general education. Senate took no action on the report, but decided to postpone discussion until a special meeting, to be called at a later date by President Milton S. Eisenhower. The report, presented by Ernest W. Callenbach, committee chairman, sets forth 13 objectives and recommendations for improving general education. 5 Educational Ideas Outlined by Prexy If the American people intend to give their educational system the financial support it needs and deserves, they must be willing to make sacrifices in other less vital areas, President Milton S. Eisen hower told a convention of teachers and school administratoirs at Altoona yesterday. as a framework for his discus sion of the impact of America’s fast-rising population on its schools, he outlined five “funda mental ideas” which form this country’s educational creed: First, that education is vital to the economics, social and moral strength of the free system. Second, that all ' the nation’s youth are entitled to equal edu cational opportunity. Third, that the security of the United States depends upon the character, ideas, ingenuity, and competence of its citizens . . . especially its youth . . . and that these qualities are enhanced by a free educational system. Knowledge Needed Fourth, that the complex re sponsibilities we share with other free nations call for broader knowledge, greater skill, deeper understanding, and a higher de gree of maturity on the part of all Americans . . . qualities which sound education must foster. Fifth, that while educational problems are usually nationwide in scope, the formation of educa tional policy and the control and management of our publicly-sup ported educational institutions are traditionally and properly state and local functions.” Summarizes Surveys Dr. Eisenhower summarized re cent national surveys which indi cate that the number of students graduated yearly from high schools in the United States will increase from last spring’s 1,274,- 000 to 2,600,000 in 1970. Long range development studies con ducted for Penn State’s Board of Trustees indicate -that by 1970 there will be about 33,000 more total college-and university stu dents in the Commonwealth than there were in 1950, when enroll ments in Pennsylvania’s colleges and universities totaled 107,000. The vice president said it would be a mistake for Eisenhower to get “personally involved” in any intraparty feuds over candidates by barnstorming for individuals. He said that would smack of the “purge idea” and would do the party more harm than good. Nixon agreed it’s a difficult battle for the Republicans, but expressed confidence his party will win. He declared the cam paign the Democrats are waging would take the country “back to the days when the Communist danger was ignored—back to the days of the red herring.” His “red herring” remark was an indirect criticism of the Tru man administration’s handling of the subversion problem. The decision for the President to make at least one more major speech than the two already an nounced undoubtedly won’t satis fy all hands —particularly. GOP candidates. Eisenhower spoke on “Education’s New Responsibilities,” and Judicial Board Asks Probation For 2 Frosh The Association of Independent Men’s Judicial Board of Review last night recommended that two first semester men residing on the first floor of Hamilton Hall be placed on judicial probation un til Thanksgiving. The two students were reported on Wednesday for removing a sliding door from a closet and playing ping-pong on its surface. The door, complete with an erected net, paddles and ball, was discovered lying on a desk by a housekeeper Wednesday morning. No damdge was reported. The board will recommend ju dicial probation and the paying of any expenses ingurred in replac ing the door by physical plant workers to the Dean of Men’s office. Judicial probation involves at tending every meeting of the board for the sentenced period. Last night was the semester’s first meetting of the independents’ judicial group for trying discipli nary cases. Members of the board are volunteers who were selected by a screening committee last spring. Committee Picks Zelko Harold P. Zelko, professor of public speaking, has been named to a two-year term on the public relations committee of the Amer ican Society of Training Direc tors. Eisenhower will make a nation wide television-radio address to morrow night, the first of the three major speeches he now is planning. He and Nixon will speak at a big political rally in the 6000-seat Denver Municipal Auditorium, and similar GOP “precinct workers day” rallies all over the country will be turned in. As previously announced,' the President will make another na tionwide TV-radio address Nov. 1, election eve. Republican congressional lead ers will arrive here tomorrow for a political strategy conference and a review of the international situation in advance of Eisen hower’s evening speech. At his news conference today, Nixon hit back at Democratic National Committee contentions that, as a senator, he voted in ten cases against positions later tak en by Eisenhower in the 1952 campaign. CPA, OK? See Page 4 The committee recommended that each freshman or transfer student be examined in the areas of reading and writing skills, ele mentary computation, and litera ture and the fine arts. Candidate Exams ’ It was also recommended that candidates for baccalaureate de grees be required to pass exami nations in several areas of general education: social and physical sci ence and personal and community health. Among the other objectives m cluded in the report were: 1. To acquire typical factual in formation, regardless of occupa tional limitations, in the fields of physical science, biological sci ence, and the humanities. To achieve this objective the com mittee recommended that each student be required to schedule 12 credits in biological and phy sical science and 12 credits in hu manities and social science, with not less than three credits in each field. Critical Judgment Needed 2. To develop ability to apply “critical judgment” in the four areas listed above. To achieve this objective it was recommend ed that students take courses in logic or argumentation, if the ob jective was not met by other courses in these fields. 3. To foster effective listening and speaking and to develop read ing and writing skills as aids to productive reasoning. The com mittee recommended that compre hensive tests be given in the sixth semester, and that remedial cour ses be given according to the re sults of the examination. The committee also recom mended a program for developing skill in elementary mathematics and quantative thinking. To achieve this end, the report recommended a comprehensive examination in these fields dur ing the third semester, and the institution of remedial courses if necessary. Cars to Start Rally Tonight A motorcade and groups of hat men and women will round up students for the first home game pep rally at 8 tonight in front of Old Main. The motorcade will begin at 7:15 to collect students on cam pus, downtown, and at fraterni ties. Hat men and women will en ter dorms at the same time to col lect freshmen for the rally. Members of the Blue Band and cheerleading, squad will take part in the demonstration. Harriet Barlow, seventh semester educa tion major, will be mistress of ceremonies assisted by Carole Schmitzer, fifth semestc. business administration major. The rally is being held at 8 to enable coaches and members of the team to be present. Sponsoring organizations are Scrolls, senior women’s hat soci ety, and Skull and Bones, senior men’s hat society. 4000 Parking Permits The Campus Patrol has allo cated close to 4000 parking per mits on campus for the current school year. Students have been issued 1560 permits and faculty and staff member 2408 permits.. FIVE CENTS