Today's Ft Clout Rain $ ireeast: VOL. 59. No. 3 tor to Talk Sen Nej t Thursday :or Edward Martin (R.-Pa.) will talk on.“ Major the Nation” at 2 p.m. next Thursday in the assembly room. U. S. Sena issues before Hetzel Union ilk, the second in a series on “Ethics and Public Martin’s Policy,” will e sponsored by P: buncil All-U Day Eng Want! Caree Jack KendaL, president of the Engineering ar d Arc h i tecture Student Council, tonight will sug gest to Inter-College Council Board that it replace the indus trial Exposition this spring with an All-University Career Day. The Engineering and Architec ture Student Council favored IC CB taking charge of this expo sition instead of the individual councils. The. council's suggestions were based on information from Jack Kendall who just attended a Career Exposition at Michi gan State. The purpose of Michigan’s ex position was to acquaint students with the assets of different com panies and inform students of where they could go in industry and their limitations. Each of the 73 companies rep resented had men on hand to dis cuss informally job opportunities with the students. All fields were represented, not only those concerned with indus try. It was suggested by the coun cil that the program be more career orientated instead of on ly offering general information as we did last year. An All-University Career Day would benefit and should interest students in all curriculums, the council felt, and should therefore command space in the Hetzel Union Building. LA Frosh Applications Dus Applications for freshman seats on the Liberal Arts Student Council must be submitted by 5 p.m. tomorrow in 138 Sparks. Nygreen to Speak IFC To 1 Holds Banquet Hose Workshop The three will close ton Kent State U; quet. -day Interfraternity Council workshop program light when Glen T. Nygreen, dean, of men at niversity, addresses the annual workshop ban- The bant Room of the Fraternity pre: ter advisers an invited to att( iiuet will begin at 5:45 p.m. in the Penn State Nittany Lion Inr,. ! idents, local chap i guests have ber.u nd Nygreen is t viser to the N nity Conferen officer, of Sig fraternity. Marshall J business adi Clearfield, wii of ceremonU i IFC president Sigma Chi ti for greatest i < ment to Thetu from 37ih io standings. he educational ad itional Interfrater :e and a national na Alpha Epsilon icobson, senior in linistraiion from 11 serve as master s. Edward Hints, l, will present the cholarship trophy cholastic improve i Xi, who advanced third place in the _ The scholai cial fraterniti to Theta Xi; ship trophy for so :s will be awarded nd Pi Lambda Phi, atyp Olnlbgi STATE COLLEGE, PA.. THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 23, 1958 i Sigma Alpha, political science honorary society, and the student cabinet of the University Chris tian Association. Sen. Joseph S. Clark Jr. de livered-the first address. The purpose of these talks is to acquaint students with out standing political figures and fo encourage responsible citizen ship through a greater aware ness of the major policy decis ions confronting the nation. Martin has begn a member of the Senate since 1947-. He has pre viously served Pennsylvania as governor, state treasurer, adju tant-general, auditor-general and chairman of the Republican State Committee. A native of Ten Mile, he holds honorary degrees from colleges and universities throughout Penn sylvania and is a trustee of Waynesburg College. Martin saw service in the Span ish-American War and both world wars. He lias received numerous military decorations, including the Distinguished Service Cross and the Purple Heart. Martin graduated from Waynesburg College in 1901. He received doctor of law degrees from Washington and Jefferson College and the University of. Pittsburgh. He was admitted to the Pennsylvania bar in 1905 and began his practice in Waynesburg. Circa Contributions Will Be Accepted Contributions of all types of creative work will be accepted by Circa, campus literary maga zine, until Jan. 5 at the Hetzel Union desk. Short stories, plays, poems, non fiction, essays, descriptive sket ches and art work may be con tributed by both students and faculty members. Non-student contributions .are being published this year to broaden the scope of the publication, Ruth Billig, edi tor-in-chief, said. Since manuscripts will not be returned, contributors have been advised by the Circa staff to keep carbon copies of anything turned in. who tied for the highest aver ages. Alpha Zeta will be present ed the professional social frater nity scholarship trophy. Leonard Julius, workshop chair man, said the attendance at Tues day night’s individual workshops was excellent. At the 10 work shops'which discussed every phase of fraternity administration, an average of 45 fraternity repre sentatives were present, Julius said. ♦ Last year the average atiend . ance was under 40 men for each workshop. Julius cited the pres idents, pledgemasters, rushing chairmen and public and alumni relations workshops as being - (Continued on page five) FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Eleanor Roosevelt, Attlee To Open Lecture Series By 80881 LEVINE Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Clement Attlee will speak on campus this semester as part of the University Lecture Series. Although the contracts, which are now in the hands of University officials, have not yet been signed, no hitch is expected, Christian K. Arnold, staff assistant to President Eric A. Walker said. Mrs. Roosevelt, prominent public figure and wife of former President of the United $1.25 tickets still-remain for the Roberto Iglesias’ Ballet Espagnol performance scheduled for 8 p.m. Sunday in Recreation Building. Hexner Will Speak At UN Celebration United Nations Day, celebrated throughout the world 1 tomorrow, will be observed locally by a lecture to be given' by Dr. Ervin P. Hexner at 7:30 tonight in the Hetzel Union assembly room. A television program featuring international students, will be presented at 9 a.m. today on WFBG-TV, Channel 10. Hexner was formerly affiliated with the International Monetary Fund. He recently retired from this organization and is now with the Department of. Political Sci ence as a visiting professor. He will remain with the department for the rest of the year. „ Hexner will speak on "UN Swords Into Plowshares." He will discuss the structure and operation of the United Nations and will give his ideas as to how it could be improved. He will discuss some of the prob lems and difficulties which now face the UN. The'lecture is being sponsored by the International Relations Club and the University Chris tian Association. “Festival of the Nations” will be the theme of the television program to be broadcast this] morning. International students representing Israel, Hawaii, Mex ico, India, Hungary, Czechoslo vakia, Ghana, Japan, China (For mosa) and Germany will demon-: starte songs and dances of their native lands and will give short descriptions of their customs and countries. The American Association for the United Nations and the Uni versity Committee on Interna tional Understanding are spon soring the telecast. . The campus program is being held today instead of tomorrow to avoid conflicting with Junior Prom. i University Research Bids To Be Token On Research Center Bids will be requested in the near future for two addi tional units of the new $1.2 million Research Center. The Research Center is being built on an area east of the Atomic Research Reactor and along the route of the pro posed University Drive. Excavation for the first unit * has beerT completed and founda- lines will be centrally located tion work is in progress. This throughout the buildings so that unit will hatfe one floor in addi-j utilities wiil be readily available tion to a partial basement which in all parts of the buildings, will house utilities for the entire: The new units, like the unit center. inow being built, will be of steel The first unit is expected to be.frame and brick exterior wall completed early in the spring se-construction, mester. - Bids will also be requested The two new units, to be com- on the 250-foot corridor that pleled by the fall semester, will connect the three units. 1959, will be similar to the unit The center is planned to help now under construction. .-{meet -a shortage of facilities re- Each will have one main floor, suiting from the rapidly exand -68 by 186 feet, and each will ing research program at the Uni have movable partitions dividing; versity. It is also to provide facili the main floor into rooms 30 feet ties more economically than ara long and 30 feet wide. Utility! (Continued on page eight) Hit States Franklin D. Roosevelt is scheduled to speak here Jan. 7. No definite date has been set for the appearance of Attlee, for mer prime minister of England and leader of the British Labor party. The Lecture Series com mittee is considering Feb. 23 or Feb. 26 for Attlee’s speech. Mrs. Roosevelt has sent a list of topics she is prepared to lec ture on, and the committee will choose one from among them. One of the topics is “Russia— The Country and the People as I Saw Them,” which would be based on her trip through Russia last year. Under this topic sho would cover a comparison of (1) home life in America and Russia; (2) the general development of education in both countries; and (3) the health services in both countries. The remainder of the list is: “The UN and Its Importance to the Individual Citizen of the U.S.”; “The UN and Its Special ized Agencies”; “How Can the U.S. Best Influence the World Against Communism?” and “The Change in the U.S. Picture over 50 Years.” Attlee has also sent a list which includes: "The Future of Europe'-'; "World Government or Chaos"; "The Future of Dem ocratic Government"; and "Two Great Systems of Democratic Government—Britain and the U.S. Compared." The committee is discussing arrangements for a press confer ence and a reception to accom pany each appearance. Other speakers who are being considered for the spring semes ter are Vice President Richard M. Nixon, former President Her bert C. Hoover Sr., former Presi dent Harry S. Truman, Sen. John S. Kennedy, and Walter Reuther, president of the AFL-CIO. Truman was invited to speak here in November, but previous i commitments prevented his ac ; cepling. He did, however, promise | to consider visiting the University at a later date. By LIANNE CORDERO Last of a Series Coming Attractions See Page 4 FIVE CENTS
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