TUESDAY, SEPTEMEiER 23. 1958 Hou Mor The number •f students now in temporary hogsing is slowly de - creasing with the movement of 10 women yesterday into permanent h •using and the removal of all students as signed to the Rid -riour Health Center. Otto E. Mueller, director of housing, said he expects 10 more women to be assigned to perment rooms today. By the , end of the week Mueller said he !hopes to have the. 29 remaining women students now , living in recreation rooms moved into, !permanent rooms. The over crowded situation arises annually since the Uni versity takes in more siudents than its capacity in order to make up for the many early drop-outs. The Registrar's Office-yester day said it has [not made a count yet of the drop-outs and the first 'tally would not be made until ! the first of next week. Of an original load of 103 fresh man women, 62 of them still re main in temporary hOusing facil ities, Mueller said. Fifty-eight up perelasswomen remain in the study lounges. Mueller eventually hopes to have only two students living in each study lounge. This pro vides the women with more room than they have in double rooms and relivies the conges tion which existed last week, he said. Students assigned to the study lounges will be moved as soon as vacancies occur, he said. Only 25 men remain in study lounges and no freshman men re main in .the recreation rooms, !Mueller said. Originally '4B men were housed in study lounges land 72 were temporarily assigned Ito the recreation rooms. All students that had been temporarily housed in the health center had been moved into permanent housing by the end of last week, Mueller said. Reg istr For Ru Ends I Registration for ing will end today. Second semester class women may and upper register from d 2 to 5 p m. 9 a.m. to 12 noon a in Simmons loung:. Phyllis Musk a , Panhellenic Co4icil president, s.! , id this year's numbet of coeds registered is well below the spring formal rushing figure. This year's figure was not available. Chatter dates began yesterday and will last through Friday of this week and Monday through Friday of next week. Sororities may hold chatter , dates from 2 to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to 8 p.m. All answers to chatter date invitations must be returned I to the dean of women's office by 1 p.m. that day. Preferential lists will be given to the coeds Oct. 9 and matched the next day. Bids will be slipped underneath the coeds' doors around dinnertime and ribboning will be held the same evening. Artists Series Tickets Available at HUB Desk . Students may pick up free tickets for the New York Pro Musica concert at the Hetzel Union desk beginning at 1 p.m. today. Student identification cards must be presented. Tickets fO . r non-students will go on sale at the desk tomorrow arid Thursday, The musical grotip, world reknown for ifs work, in reviv ing- the musical masterpieces composed before the' Nth cen tury, will open the 1958-59 Uni versity Artists Series when it appears in Schwab Auditorium Friday night. The New York Pro Musica was founded in 1952 by Noah Green berg, who is now musical direc tor of the group, and Bernard Krainis, one of the world's lead ing musicians on the recorder. The group, .which began with 5 members, now has a permanent company which includes six vo-1 calists aifd four instruMentalistsl in addition to the director. The group specializes in mu sic from the Renaissance, Italian 1 Baroque music, _'uric f r om { _ medieval Spain, rmany and France, English sons and mad rigals and the c uich music from these perio It studies and p dorms corn-, positions fiom suc masters as Purcell, Lassus, Dufay, B l o w, Bianchieri, Perotin,-Palestrina and s Bird. The New York Pro Musica is a non-profit organization., The group usually takes up to a year; of practice preparing a program. In order, to secure program ma ' terial, it looks back into the ar-i chives -of mOnasteries, , forgotten p libraries, churches nd universi ties ;here and abro t d and rare I published manushi Every 'year the : , up presents a series Of -concerts a New York's Town Hall, : ,the ,cloisters, the' Kaufman Auditorj ~ the. Frick ing Places Students tion ping day formal rush- Collection and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Last year the group presented their version of "The Play of Daniel" in New York's Cloisters. The opera had not been per"- formed since 1250. It to an audience of more than 10,000 per sons in eight perforniances. Collegian Ad Staff Meeting THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Collegian Credit Siaff , Meeting Tonite at-7 208 WILLARD Attendance Mandatory! TONIGHT at 6130 p. m 9 CARNEGIE 444ttendance Required Accident Claims Life Of Alumnus Naval Lt. Richard P. Gramley, a 1956 graduate of the University and son of Eugene T. Gramley, president of the Penn State Alum ni Association, died recently as the result of a swimming accident in Guba. The commanding admiral of his fleet, lying off Cuba, notified his parents this weekend. A naval communication through Havana, Cuba today neither de nied nor confirmed the death of Gramley, but said any informa tion of this incident would have to be checked in Washington with the Pentagon. Gramley received his commis sion through the NROTC program when he was graduated in 1956. He was due to finish his tour of duty this summer. He planned to enter Gettysburg Seminary as a ministerial student in the fall semester in 1959. , Survivors in addition to his parents include a sister, Mrs. Anne Freed of Danville. The 'body will be flown from Cuba to Milton, where burial will take place. Complete information about the funeral is not available. Parking Meters Net Over $2OOO Parking meters in State Col lege netted $2270 in deposits and fines during the month of August out of a total of $3130.50 in fines collected by the local police de partment, a report by Polite Chief John P.. Juba said. Fines accounted for $260 of the meter revenues. Other revenues were from: fines by Justice of - the Peace Guy G. Mills, $228; fines from Justice of the Peace William P. sell, $347.- SQ; borough treasurer $9l; fines for overnight parking and no parking zone, $182; and bicycle license and inspection, $l2. Textbook Authored By tE Professors Wesley P. Winter, assistant professor of industrial engineer ing, and D. C. Ekey, professor of industrial engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology, are co authors of a new textbook, "Intro duction to FoOnthy Technology." The book, recently published by the McGraw-Hill Book Co., is presented in outline form to permit a comprehensive coverage of material in the shortest time possible. Eng Council Will Meet The Engineering Student Coun cil will meet at 7 tonight in 105 Mechanical Engineering: Student Encampment Backs AM Station By PAT EVANS Personnel Director (Fifth of a Series) Student encampment delegates threw their weight be hind the drive for a student AM radio station when they approved this workshop recommendation: "The University (should) apply for an AM broadcasting license to further the educat tributions of radio station W] The recommendation was in cluded in the plenary report of the workshop on communications. The report was approved at the encampment plenary session. The recommendation will come before All-University Cabinet this fall. If it is passed by Cabi net it will be forwarded to the administration. WDFM Station Manager Wil bur Lewellen announced last week that the student radio sta tion may be able to convert to AM facilities for about $3OOO. He said the money could be drawn from a $5OOO fund the station has in reserve. Lewellen said application for an AM frequency would have to be made by the University to the Fe d eral Communications Com mission. A student group may not apply, he said. The encampment communica tions workshop also recommend ed that campus communications media study the feasibility of summer operation with regard to economic and personnel require ments. The report included this suggestion: "That The Daily Collegian con tinue publication during the sum-i mer of 1959 on a schedule de termined by (the Collegian) to meet the requirements of the 'summer enrollment. Another recommendation asked that the Student Handbook be sold for 25 . cents starting next 'year. Cabinet approved this sugges tion at last week's meeting. It was included_ in the report from the editor and business manager of the 195$ handbook. Limellen was workshop chair man. Henrietta Harris was secre tary. Lowenfeld Contributes 'Paper on Art Education Viktor Lowenfeld, head of the Department of Art Education, has contributed a paper entitled, "Art for Teacher Education in This Time of Stress," to the American Association of Colleges for Teach er Education. His paper stresses the impor tance of creativity in teaching. If also refers to discussions between him and teachers in the Soviet Union. Official sto ( 7 / 4 ? S 4lll w lib/Indy Lignri ty 12• Heil/lc..Jones Company n , n 1/1./orld; alargeli inanulachtrer o/ et Magi 18 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY A "A 46. \ 449 C4e o I 1 )iii/ z ir • VW; f e cz , 202 S. ALLEN STREET on and communicational con- FM." Munitz To Lectuie On Cosmology Dr. Milton K. Munitz, professor of philosophy at New York Uni versity, will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in 10 Sparks. His lecture, entitled "Historic Trends and Outcome in Cosmol ogy," will be the first in the Dis tinguished Lecture Series in Phil osophy this year. It will be open to the public. The series was instituted by the Department of Philosophy to bring to the campus distinguished philosophers for discussions of new ideas and the exchange of ideas with members of the fac ulty, Dr. John M. Anderson, pro fessor and head of the Depart ment of Philosophy, said. Munitz plans to be on campus both Thursday and Friday to spend some time with faculty members in addition to present ing his lecture. He is a graduate of City Col lege of New York. ffe recieved his 'master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees from Columbia University. He taught at City College, Queens College, Columbia University and Princeton University and is a member of the Graduate School faculty and the undergraduate school faculty at New York Uni versity. Archers to Give Show Tomorrow at Ree Hall The Nittany Valley Archeis will present a free archery ex hibition at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Recreation Hall. Movies about . archery cham pions and hunting with a bow and arrow -will be shown after the program. The exhibition is being spon sored by the Outing Club. PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers