TUESDAY. APRIL 1.195 LA Tab! Motion ( E Comp A motion that incoming fresh men who cannot qualif; ’ for Eng lish Composition 1 be advised against enrolling in the College of the Liberal Arts has been tabled by Liberal Arts faculty members. The motion was made Thursday by Dr. A. Bruce Sutherland, pro fessor of* English literature. Dr. Robert T. Oliver, professor of speech, said he thought the motion was far too important to be acted on hastily and moved to table it. Oliver said he would like to see similar recommendations cover ing speech, mathematics and oth er basic abilities. The faculty also approved 27 courses including five courses un der the School of the Aits which were objected to by Dr. Harold E. Dickson, professor of history of art and architecture. Dickson said he had not seen the proposed courses and that the question was whether all art changes ought not to be discussed in meetings of the art faculty. George S. Zoretich, assistant Srofessor of art, said the courses ad been discussed and approved by the section of the school con cerned, the studio section. The faculty then defeated 47 to 46 a motion made by (William L. Werner, professor of American literature, to table all School of the Arts courses included in the list of new courses. The faculty also approved a revised 'program for English Composition 2 using literary works as a basis for compositions. A motion made by Dr. Philip A. Shelley, professor of German and comparative literature, to limit the literary works used to American and English works was defeated. The motion was defeated after Dr. John S. Bowman, professor of English' composition, said in a speech applauded by the faculty that the purpose of the course was to make students understand and express ideas, regardless of the nationality of the works’ originator. FOR GOOD RESULTS' USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS ■Mm Thar* needn't be. You cm get a head start on your savings pro gram by beginning, now, while you're in college. Life Insurance offers you a combi nation of protection mV savings, and by starting your program eotv you will have the advantage of lower premiums. See your Provident Mutual cam pus representative formorelnfor mation on a variety of plans, which may be tailored to your indi vidual present and future needs. Campus Office 227 W. Beaver Ave. AD 8-9421 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia happy- easter .... KEELERS .... the university bookstore THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA WUS to Conduct Ist Drive To Aid Medical Trust Fund World University Service, a former member of the dis solved Campus Chest, will conduct its first independent fund raising campaign from April 18 through. 26. Organized after World War I, WUS is an organization of “students for students” dedicated to meeting the crucial needs of the university community throughout the world, .credos is “Their future is our future.” "That learning may not die, WUS has provided student med ical assistance in Greece, stu dent housing units in Lebanon and Israel, student tuberculosis wards in Japan add Korea and, recently, food and supplies for Hungarian refugees. This year the proceeds from the campus campaign will be al located to the African Medical Scholarships Trust Fund. The dearth of doctors in the Union of South Africa Is called extreme. Tuberculosis claims 15,000 lives per year, and only one doctor Tickets to Be Sold For Jam Session Tickets are available from members of Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority for a jam session to be held from 2 to 5 p.m. April 15 at Beta Sigma Rho. Don Smaltz and . his quartet and the Continentals will provide! the music for the session which will benefit the State College Sheltered Workshop. The work shop aids handicapped persons in the area. The sorority also will sponsor! a babysitting service April 11-12 for the same cause. 'The Risen Christ' to Be Vesper Service Theme Preston N. Williams, assistant; chaplain, will speak on “The Ris en Christ” at the vesper service at 4:30 p.m. today in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Memorial Chapel. “O Susser Herr Jesu Christe” by Heinrich Shutz will be sung by the Tuesday Vesper Choir un der the student direction of Wayne Zarr. Scientists Engineers 'xTRaCA^’ || RESEARCH :|| IN AERONAUTICS §P‘j|j flushing forward the frontiers of flight ||§i| NACA For over forty years the nation’s research organization pjl|g devoted'to the generation of scientific knowledge es aS sential to assure American leadership in aeronautics O, NACA The research team-r-engineer, scientist and technician gs|§ _a concentration of knowledge and skill's working Ifgil cooperatively to solve research’s challenging problems |§|p NACA offers unexcelled research facilities,' a stimulating pro- SS fessional environment, and a 'challenging assignment mWA for ||j| and .Scientists itlt CHEMICAL ' CHEMISTS ELECTRICAL PHYSICISTS P. MECHANICAL MATHEMATICIANS pi SSast.ll <? bepbesentative Mm METALLURGICAL Mr. James J. Gangler on campus April 10, 1958 See your place ment office for Interview appointment NACA. LEWIS FLIGHT PROPULSION LABORATORY, Cleveland 11. Ohio NACA also operates other research cen ters at Langley Field, Virginia; Moffett Field, California and Edwards, California National Advisory Committee For Aeronautics serves each 40,000. Although the 9,000,000 Africans comprise 70 per cent of the Union of South Africa population, they are the most diseaSe-ridden. ■ The mortality rate of African infants is 20 to 30 per cent, com* pared to the white rate of 3 per cent. Life expectancy of the surviving Negro child is 36.4 years, contrasted with the white expectancy of 66 years. Only 160 non-white doctors practice among these people. The average African family in Jo hannesburg would have to ex ceed its income by $2l per month to maintain health and sanitation conditions, according to WUS. Fraternity Affairs Seeks Pledges for Office Work Freshman and sophomore frat ernity pledges may sign up at the Hetzel Union desk to be inter viewed for Fraternity Affairs Of fice positions. - Fraternity Affairs Office secre taries become eligible for future |IFC executive offices. Additional [information may be obtained from [David Morrow, AD 8-6788. Hava you heard.., Your clothes can be washed and dryed in about 2 hours on Tuesdays and Wednesdays if you ask at the Launderette 210 W. College Avenue 20 NROTC Midshipmen To Participate in Air Cruise Twenty Naval ROTC midshipmen have left campus to aviation indoctrination cruise nsacola, Fla. participate in the annual Nava’ during the spring recess at Pe They were selected from jun iors who volunteered for the cruise. It is anticipated that upon g r a d u ation and commissioning, many of them will enter Naval aviation. Participants were flown to Pen sacola by Naval aircraft along with selected midshipmen of the University of Pennsylvania. Also at Pensacola are 200 other mid shipmen from other NROTC units throughout the nation. Among the activities planned are flights in training aircraft and helicopters, tours of the training command activities, flight apti tude testing and a flight demon stration by the “Blue Angels,” the Navy’s precision flying team. The midshipmen are being ac companied on the 5-day visit by Lt. Donald White, USN, who is a member of the NROTC unit staff. Participants on the trip are Wil liam Cunningham, Nielson Lam bert, Phil Bostley, Challen Bonar, Thomas Burns, Earl Gardner, April Fool! In fact, you’re the victim of one kind of trick eveiy month of the year. It has to do with taxes. More than 20 cents out, of every dollar you pay for electricity goes for taxes. But in some parts of the country, several mil lion families and businesses escape paying taxes in their electric bills that you pay in yours. These are people whose electricity . comes from federal government electric sys tems. Many of them pay less than one-fifth of the taxes on electric service that you pay. This tax trick is on you—because you help make up the taxes these people don’t pay. Don’t you think federal laws should require everyone to pay his own share? f WIST PENN POWER Richard Wilt, Gary Hale, Loui* Testen, Samuel Moyer, Glenn Rosenberger, Richard Barth, Charles Kester, John Sopko, MacLaughlin, Timothy Booher, Robert Mills, Gerald Jackson and Louis Prato. Tickets for Choir Will Be Distributed Students may get tickets for the concert by the Obernkirchen Children’s Choir at 1 p.m. next Wednesday, the day they return from vacation, at the Hetzel Un ion desk. The concert is the 15th program of the Artists’ Series, and is sched uled for Wednesday, Aprii 10th, in Schwab Auditorium.- The sale of tickets to non-stu dents will be from 1 to 5 p.m. Ap ril 11 and 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. April 12, December, too t PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers