PAGE EIGH-, TV Classes Are Praised Teaching of psychology and chemistry at the University by closed circuit television has been well received so far by students and teachers taking part in it, members of the Penn State chap ter of the American Association of University Professors were told Monday night. Dr. Clarenc? R. Carpenter, head of the department of psychology and director of the Instructional Film Research program, told the AAUP that in developing the pro ject the needs of the instructor and the student have been pre dominant considerations. The present program, he said, is an attempt to test the feasabil ity of low cost closed circuit tele vision for instruction at the Uni versity and to determine the ef fectiveness, acceptability, poten tialities, and limitations of that instruction. Under the program, instructors in Psychology 2 and Chemistry 2 teach before a stu dents audience, and other stu dents watch the lecture over tel evision sets in other classrooms in the same building. Dr. Grant W. Smith, professor of chemistry, reported that a valid comparison will be possible between students taking the course by television and those not taking it by television, since all will take the same examinations. The chapter went on record as favoring extension of social se- PENN\ttMm<Blwfr,W Spring 1c Sale with Many Other Gigantic Savings ... YOU SAVE AT WHELANS 89c value Penn Stale Stationery 50c Woodbury Shampoo .... 33c 19c Forhans Tooth Brush 3 lor 50c 25c tube Lanolin Cream 2 for 26c Charles Antell Formula No. 9 Cream with free Shampoo 98c 85c Noxzema Cream 2.89 value Multiple Vitamins 2 for 2.90 29c China Leaf Ash Tray 2 for 30c Hazel Bishop Lipstick with free nail polish I ■ 10 CHERAMY SKIN BALM $ 2 OO SIZE 16 oz. Bottle Rayve Shampoo 3 for 89c Sale Prices in Effect Wednesday through Saturday Remember Whelans for quality merchandise at great savings No lower prices anywhere Brubeck Concert To Appear Here The Penn Stale Jaxz Club will sponsor a Dave Brubeck concert at 9 p.m. March 18 in Recreation Hall. Brubeck will feature Paul Desmond on the alto saxo phone. Tickets are available at the Student Union desk in Old Main or at Jass Club meetings. They are priced at $1.50 gen eral admission and $1 to club members. Ken Lesight and his quartet entertained club members at a meeting last night. The quartet has Earl Seely at piano, Austin Nester on the bass. Peter Kief er on the drums, and Lesight on trumpet. The club has scheduled a mixer for Sunday at Alpha Ep silon Pi. curity coverage to University em ployees, in addition to the present state retirement system. Merwin Humphrey, chairman of the committee on instructional problems, reported that the com mittee has met several times with Adrian O. Morse, University provost, to consider instructional problems and scholastic standards in an enlarged University. A radio committee was appoint ed to make plans for a monthly radio program sponsored by the AAUP chapter. Members of the committee are Harold Nelson, chairman; W. G. Mather, Robert M. Pockrass, and Brewster. Colgate Aerosol Shave 2 tins 1.19 Craig Martin Tooth Paste 2 tubes 69c . 69c A - Co mmU- tlflMßftfllWl •oo on CoimoHct of Mo Amtrkan Modkat Aiiocfe- **»slficvr Mon. 2.50 Value Suede Ladies Hand Laced Moccasins Variety oi Colors 79c LISTERINE Antizyme Tooth Paste with 1.15 PARKER Fine Line Pencil BOTH FOR 98c THE DAttY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 1.10 Ladr Wlfdroot Shampoo 55c CmmcUc* f" SsMiOve SLbu Your wmiKv* tkin deprive you of toe / lovely cosmetio. In -ue cosmetics, in lent* known to produce ' or allergic reactioro ilnated. lbe complnto ■IE Bn« b your treat to «n ... all to eofe, 10 that phytldant recom- MARCRte COSMETICS. *U9p, Prell Liquid Shampoo 60c & 30c 1.00 Korean Pact- (Continued from page one) members of the commission have used their freedom to travel in South Korea to spy on military installations and spread Commu nist propaganda. In an interview earlier yester day afternoon, Han called on the UN to take action to stop the vio lations. When the armistice was signed, the nations which had partici pated in the war signed a resolu tion stating that if the armistice were violated, drastic action would be taken, Han said. “We are asking the UN to keep this promise, that’s all,’’ he said. In the interview, Han said the Korean people feel they cannot compromise with the Communists. “Our people have the philoso phy that death is more preferable to slavery under Communists,” he explained. Dr. Elton Atwater, associate professor of political science, an other member of the panel, dis agreed With Han’s position, saying there was still room for the right kind of negotiation to solve the Korean problem. He said the United States must offer the Communists some gain, in return for concessions which 1 were demanded. He said he felt up to this time the U.S. has de manded the Communists give up everything and get nothing in re turn. . He proposed that the U.S. make Use of the bargaining points it has in the Far East. He suggested the U.S. might offer the Communists recognition of Red China along with a seat 2.00 value Enamel Lighter (Ronson Type) 54M value Plastic Raincoat with carrying cm* 2.98 29c value Hamilton Aspirin -100 s 2 lor 30c Sylvania Sun Lamp with free metal guard 9*60 50c Typewriter Paper 70 sheets 2forslc 50c Marco Polo Watch Band (leather) 2forsfc Pocket Photo Album FREE with 2 packages No. 25 Sylvania Flash Bulbs 59c Squibb Angle Tooth Brush 2 for 89c 45c Llsterine Tooth Paste 2 for 59c 2.50 Men’s Billpak Wallet 1.66 (genuine leather) Imported Briar Pipes 1.00 Value 2f.ri.0l 5.00 value Palmolive Nylon Zipper Bag Rapid Shave 18-inch 2 78c tins in th« UN and trading privileges in return for the unification of Korea and the neutralization of Formosa. Panel members included Dr. Atwater, Han, Robert T. Oliver, CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALK 8 SPEED AUTOMATIC Webeor" Sham graph, excellent condition, jut over hauled. Cell Maarine 418 Simmone. FOB A 26% dlaconnt on cue tom made aeat covers call Al Fine at AD 7-771!. Free installation guaranteed. 194 S DODQE CP, radio and heater, new tiree, new aeat covers. Call AD 7-4928. USED BLUE overcoat—good condition, ciae SB. $l5. Call John Starker AD 8-870* or Theta Chi. MISCELLANEOUS SALLY’S DELIVERS the perfect Pina, The Big Boy and all our other delicious product. T days a week. Dial AD 7,2878. WHEN YOUR typewriter needs repairs just dial AD 7-2492 or bring machine to 838 W. College Ave. Will pick up and deliver. 13.000 Roaders See That* Ads EOn Campus (Author •f -Banfoot Bof with Ckotk," ole.) THE CARE AND FEEDING OF BOOKS You busy college people —you with your classes and your studying and your social activities and your three-legged races it is no wonder that you have so little time for reading. I mean reading for the pure pleasure of it, not to cram for exams. It is a sad omission, and my heart goes out to you. I do, however, take comfort from the fact that the graduation season ap proaches. Many of you will soon leave the hurly-burly of college for the tranquility of the outside world. Oh, you'll love it on the outside! It is a quiet life, a gracious'and contemplative life, a life of ease and relaxation, of plenty of time to enjoy the treasures of literature. It is with you in mind that I sit now in my cane-bottomed rocker and dose my kindly gray eyes and smoke a mellow Philip Morris cigarette and remember books that made me laugh and books that made me cry and, remembering, laugh and cry again. It is, I say, with you in mind that I sit thus and rock thus and close my kindly gray eyes thus and smoke a Philip Morris thus and laugh and cry thus, for I wish to recom mend these Ipvely and affecting books to you so that you too may someday sit in your cane-bottomed rockers and close your kindly gray eyes and smoke a mellow Philip Morris and remember books that made you laugh and books that made you cry and, remembering, laugh and cry again. Sitting and rocking, my limpid brown eyes closed in a plume of white smoke curling lazily upward from my excellent Philip Morris cigarette, I remember a lovely and affecting book called Blood on the Grits by that most talented young Southerner, Richard Membrane Haw. It is a tender and poignant story of a sensitive Alabama boy who passes safely through puberty only to be devoured by boll weevils ... A lovely and affecting book. I puff my splendid Philip Morris cigarette and close my danc ing blue eyes and recall another book, a thrilling true adventure, lovely and affecting, called I Climbed Everest the Hard Way by Cliff Sherpa. Mr. Sherpa, as everyone knows, was the first man to reach the peak of Mt. Everest by tunneling from below. In his book he gives a lovely and affecting account of his trip, which was not as easy as it sounds, you may be sure. I light another merry Philip Morris cigarette and close my lambent hazel eyes and recollect another book Life on the Farm by Dick Woolly. This is a short book only 65 words and rather a dull one. It would not be worth mentioning here were it not for the fact that the author is a sheep. I exhale a cloud of snowy white smoke from my bracing Philip Morris cigarette and shut my laughing' green eyes and think of the vast, vast array of historical novels that have given me pleasure. \ There is Blood on the Visor by Richard Membrane Haw (he who wrote the lovely and affecting Blood on the Grits). There is Cold Steel and Hot Flashes by Emmaline Prentiss Moulting. There is The Black Shield of Sigafoos by Wruth Wright. There is Four Quarts in a Galleon by William Makepiece Clambroth. There are many, many others, all lovely, all affecting. But sitting here, drawing on my matchless Philip Morris cigarette, my saucy amber eyes closed tightly, I am thinking that the loveliest, most affecting of all historical novels is May Fuster’s classic, / Was a Serf for the F. 8.1. Mrs. Fuster, justly famed for her rich historical tapestries, has outdone herself in this tempestuous romance of Angela Bodice, fiery daughter of an entailed fief, who after a great struggle rises to the lofty position of head-linesman to the Emperor of Bosnia and then throws it all away to lead the downtrodden peasants in a revolt against the mackerel tax. She later becomes Ferdinand Magellan. But the list of fine books is endless, as you will soon discover who are about to leave the turmoil of the campus and enter into the serene world outside, where a man has time to read and rock and close his rakish taupe eyes and smoke good Philip Morris cigarettes. The makers of Philip Morris, mho bring yon this column, tall yon that In our book , PHILIP MORRIS Is the mildest , tastiest cigarette anybody ever made. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2.1955 professor of speech; Vernon-As piturian, associate professor of political science, and Richard C. Maloney, assistant dean of the College of the Liberal Arts, who acted as moderator. LOST POST SLIDE RULE. Initial. F.K.W. ea ml. and inalda flap of eaae. 403 Jordan. Reward. CLASS RING, Penn State 'B4, Carnwte Hall, Tuna. Feb. St. Ffndvr pleaae «on tect Journ. Dept. Liberal reward. WOULD PERSON who took grav topcoat from Placement Office Wednesday please cell AD 8.8088. RIDE WANTED RIDE WANTED to Hsrrlabtug or Lebanon Friday, Mareh 4, after 4 p.m. Cell Bobble Dorm ext. 898 or 808. FOR RENT DOUBLE ROOM, private entranae, pri vate Uth.CallAD 7-7111 afterJßlOO p.m. ONE LARGE SINGLE room for girl grad student. Two blocks from eampu. and downtown area. Private home. Call AD 7-8478 anytime. gMsx Bulan. HR
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers