PAGE EIGHT BRYAN GREEN Love. Friendship and Marriage Western Love Criticized Green Sees It As 'Poverty Stricken' The Rev. Canon Bryan Green yesterday criticized West ern love-making, calling it artless and "poverty-stricken." He said that a "hang-over" on matters of the heart from the Puritan days exists today. We tend to think if something is enjoyed it is wro He also cited the distortio emitted from popular literature. Ile , aid traditional morals have been twisted and that old ideas have been discarded. However, Green said that ig norance can be nothing but bad and that he would rather see this kind of information than complete ignorance. He said we are experiencing an "age of transition" especially in the realm of sex models. Given said double standards exist today in regard to the chastity of men and women, say ing these standards should be changed so as to give the same standards for both men and wom en. Canon Green also discussed the material difficulties which young couples face in beginning a marriage. ..He said the problem of housing k particularly important, "Grow ing togetlm requites independ ence," he said Many young mar rieds, he explained, are denied this independence as a rvsult of their living accommodations. The problem of finances can also be a source of trouble for young couples, Canon Green said. An actual shortage, of money, he said, does not necessarily cause the dif ficulties, for the couple can grow closer by working out these prob lems. However, he said, the atti- p The ENN STATE LAYERS You are cordially invited to attend to coming-out of ~111 e Reluctant CA 1 eoUebittante ” on Friday, November the twenty-first and continuing through Saturday, January the tenth at Center Stage. By CAROL BLAKESLEE he said. of sex information which has tudes which each parnter has can be a problem spot. He gave the example of women who go to work to add to the family's resources. If the wife really enjoys her work. he said, there is little trouble. However, if she feels she is not living up to her duties as a housewife, difficulties - can oc cur, he said. The younger age at which couples marry today is also a source of difficulty, he said. However, this is only true when the persons are not completely matured and ready for marriage. In his next lecture at 4:15 p.m tomorrow in the Hetzel Union ballroom, Canon Green will dis cuss the purpose of marriage and the meaning of love. LA Council to Discuss Course Evaluation Plan The Liberal Arts Student Coun cil will meet at 6:30 tonight in 212 Hetzel Union to make plans for a course evaluation program to be conducted within each col lege by members of the Inter- College Council Board. The council will also discuss a new plan for small groups of council members to meet inform ally with faculty members at the home of the council's adviser. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE: PENNSYLVANIA Adolf Gains Research Scholar Title Dr. Helen Adolf, professor of German, has become the first; member of the College of Liberal! Arts to be awarded the title of "research scholar." As a research scholar Dr. Adolf will spend only half of the academic year teaching. During the other half of the year she will conduct research projects. Dr. Adolf, a graduate of the Univei Qity of Vienna, has gained ;international recognition for her work m the field of medieval literature, especially for her re ,sealch and papers on The Holy Grail. She is the author of 11 papers on this subject and plans to publish more when her cur rent research is completed. Dr. Adolf is now studying numerous volumes of medieval literature, both here and else- I where, in an attempt to connect the Grail psychology with its effect on the Crusades. Because of the timeless import of the Crusades and their literary reflections, Dr. Adolf hopes that the history of literature, anthro pology and religion will benefit from her investigations. Hill Appointed Associate Prof Dr. Helen D. Hill, geneticist, with the US. Regional Pasture Research Laboratory, has been ap-, pointed to the University faculty; with the tank of associate profes— sor of genetics in the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology. Dr. Hill will continue on the laboratory staff on which she has served since 1937. Se has former ly held University faculty posi-. tons in the Departments of Ger man. English and Botany and Plant Pathology. She is a graduate of the Uni versity of Chicago and received her master of science and doctor of philoSophy degrees at the Uni versity. She has done research on the cytology of pasture grasses and is co-author with her husband, Dr. J Ben Hill, rrofessor emeri tus of botany at the University, of "Genetics and Human Hered ity," published in 1955. Henninger to Broadcast Eighth Music Program G. William Henninger, profes sor of music, will present "Face The Music," the. eighth in his series of programs, over WDFM at 8 tonight. The subject of Henninger's pro gram will be monophonic music. Examples of the music of Chopin, Debussy, Bach and several other composers will be included. Mr. Hamilton, class of '7l, had the honor of a men's dormitory being named after him. He was an agriculture pr,ofessor here at the University. Union Shop By Economics Prof "Labor considers right-to-work laws its greatest threat," said Jacob J. Kaufman, "and I oppose it, too." Speaking on right-to-work and its significance in the re cent election, Kaufman, associate professor of economics, said the states which now have these laws are essentially non industrial states in the South and ! Midwest. Five of the six states which, , Prof Ends had light-to-work referendums; voted against it. Only Kansas vot— ed in favor of it. He said the unions now feel AEC work, that because of the overwhelm ing• vote against right-to-work, , the Taft-Hartley law will be• amended to repleal that part of ejo ins Staff it which gives states the right to bar union shops. The Taft-Hartley law says ink essence that the union shop may be allowed in all states except those whose laws prohibit ILI "This, in effect," he said, "gives] a state the right to veto a federal' law " Kaufman pointed out a strange; contradiction to the Taft-Hartley law in the form of the Railway' Labor Act. This law says that they union shop is allowable, notwith-' standing state law. Here is a case, he said, where because of the interstate nature of the business, the federal gov ernment would not allow the state to interfere. This law was passed four years after the Taft- Hartley enactment. Yet, Kaufman pointed out, large! industries like the automobile m-}, i dustry have interstate business as: well as factories in several states. ; If the unions negotiate with these ; industries as a whole they are sometimes allowed to set up union shops in one state and prohibited from it in another. "I don't think, however, that everyone who is . for right-to-work is anti-union," he said. Some peo ple argue the moral issue—that no one should be forced to join a union. He brought up the fact that Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt once said that union shops were not forcing people to join unions be cause if a person didn't want to join a union in a union-shop industry, he could find another job. He went on to say that there are compulsions in every job and in every, facet of life—so why single out the unions? On the subject of union shops and racketeering in the union he said there is no proof that racke teering in those unions which have union shops is a direct re sult of the union shop. He said he felt it was the nature of the industry itself which was the significant factor in union racketeering. Never a Wait - Never a Worry if you get your Penn State Class Mur's Jewelry Compapy Wait not you. Mur's has your Penn State Class Ring in stock. You can see your ring on your finger the mo ment you decide to buy it. of.`' alt A OWN( poop c \liiiii//, 'ltt ip N ' O. - #'Zeib7l N' r "/ EAVittni e.-0: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1958 Favored By 80881 LEVINE Dr. Clyde R. Burnett, associate professor of physics, has returned to the campus after a one and one-half year leave of absence during which he worked on Proj ect Matterhorn at the Forrestal Research Laboratories of Prince ton University. The ultimate aim of Project Matterhorn. sponsored by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, is to make possible a controlled fusion reactor that will produce power through the monuclear re actions. Burnett was invited to join the project in February 1957. as a spectroscopist. A spectro scopist is a scientist who deter mines the chemical content of a material by burning it. He was among the scientists working on the Stellarator, an apparatus for fusion power research. Burnett was one of the five au thors of a technical paper on the project that was presented at the International Atomic Energy Con ference in Geneva, Switzerland, in September. Burnett plans to continue I basic research in plasma phys ' ics on campus. He joined the faculty in 1953 after teaching at South Dakota State College for three years. He received his bachelor of sci ence degree from Upper lowa University and his master's and doctor of philosophy degrees from ;the University of Wisconsin. Penn State Outing Club Rock Climbing Division Meeting Tues., Nov. I I 7 P.M. 317 Willard Slides of European Mountain Areas will be shown Worry at the quality, of your ring or the money"— not you. Mur's class rings are manufac tured by the Herff-Jones Com pany world's largest manu facturer of class rings. Also, at Mur's, there's never an extra charge for credit. Ring
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers