The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 07, 1959, Image 5

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    lUARY 7, 1959
WEDNESDAY, JAW
Coni
Sche
lict Exam
dale Posted
The conflic
ter have been
inations will be
Students t£
notified by the;
read in class.
ACCTG 1 Jan IT 8:00 110 EE
ACCTG 2 Jan 16 1:10 21* BL
ACCTG 6 Jan IT 1 :10 301 Boucke
ACCTG 401 Jan IT 8:10 212 Boucke
ARO E 1 Jan 18 8:00 !0T Eng A
ARO E 411 Jan 19 8:(0 20T Eng A
ARO E 415 Jan 19 1: 0 20T Eng A
AC EC 2 Jan 20 8:00 202 Weaver
AC E 8 Jan 19 8:00 212 Eng B
AC E 14 Jan 19 8:00 101 Eng A
AC E 406 Jan 16 3:3( 20T Eng A
A H 12 Jan 19 1:10 2)2 Weaver
ANTHY 1 Jan IT 8:08 8 Sparka
ANTHY 10 Jan 16 3: (0 8 Sparka
A E 21 Jan 19 3:30 2 IT Eng A
ART 55 Jan 19 1:10 >Ol Willard
A A H 1.9 Jan 16 8 :0 I 200 Sackett
ASTRO 90 Jan IT 1:10 113 Osmond
BACT 1 Jan 20 1:10 118 111.
BACT 8 Jan 15 3:30 220 BL
HOT 1 Jan 20 3:30 2 8 BE
BOT 11 Jan 16 1:10 SOS BL
BOT 27 Jan 15 10.20 218 BL
B S 1 Jan 15 7:00 p.m. 217 Willard
B S 2 Jan 15 10:20 2 18 Willard
CER T 301 Jan 22 3 30 201 Willard
CD FR 18 Jan 20 1:1( 105 M E
CD FR 329 Jan 15 1:10 201 Willard
CD FR 405 Jan IT 10:20 205 Boucke
C E 4* Jan 19 10:20 207 Eng A
C E 61 Jan 16 10:20 207 Eng A
CL TX 101 Jan 19 10:20 319 Willard
CL TX 201 Jan 22 10:20 106 Boucke
CL TX 301 Jan 22 8:00 201 Willard
COM 6 Jan 15 7:00 p.m. 106 Boucke
COM 6 Jan 19 3:30 206 Boucke
COM 7 Jan 16 7:00 p.m. 121 M 1
COM 8 Jan 17 7:00 p.m. 2 Carnegie
COM 10 Jan 18 7:00 p.m. 208 Boucke
COM 15 Jan 19 8:00 2bB Boucke
COM 18 Jan 18 3:30 208 Boucke
COM 17 Jan 16 3:30 209 Boucke
COM 20 Jan 16 1:10 208 Boucke
COM 23 Jan 16 8:00 217 Boucke
COM 24 Jan 16 10:20 110 Osmond
COM 25 Jan 15 10:20 110 Osmond
COM 23 Jan 15 10:20 106 Boucke
COM 30 Jan 19 8:00 110 Omnond
COM 31 Jan 21 10:20 110 Oamond
COM 33 Jan 16 10:20 106 Boucke
COM 34 Jan 15 3:30 106 Boucke
COM 50 Jan 15 1:10 106 Boucke
COM 54 Jan 16 8:00 106 Boucke
COM 66 Jan 17 1:10 106 Boucke
COM 67 Jan 17 1:10 208 Boucke
COM 58 Jan 15 3:30 208 Boucke
COM 61 Jan 15 8:00 206 Boucke
COM 62 Jan 16 8:00 208 Boucke
COM 65 Jan 17 8:00 301 Boucke
P SC 29 Jan 20 8:00 211 Dairy
D SC 427 Jan 15 10:20 211 Dairy
ECON 2 Jan 15 10:20 205 Boucke
ECON 14.1.2.5.9.10.14.37.38.39.1L.2L Jan. *1
» for the final examinations of the fall semes
nnounced. The courses in which the exam
given are listed below.
king the conflicting examinations will be
r instructors. A list of their names will be
10:20 112 Osmond
ECON 14.6 8.26 Jan 16 10:20 208 Bouck*
ECON 14.15 Jan 16 10:20 205 Boucke
ECON 15.5.6 T Jan 17 16:20 208 Boucke
ECON 26 Jan 17 10:20 209 Boucke
ECON 60.8 Jan 15 10:20 209 Boucka
ECON 51 Jan 15 10:20 208 Boucka
ED H Jan 17 8:00 201 Willard
ED 51.2.1 Jan 21 8:00 SOI Willard
ED 52 Jan 15 1:10 301 Willard
ED 424 Jan 15 3:30 220 Willard
ED 426 Jan 15 10:20 301 Willard
F. E 8 Jan 19 8:00 201 EE
E E 32 Jan 20 1:10 200 EE
E E 425 Jan 19 3:30 201 EE
E E 428 Jan 19 3:30 200 EE
E E 432 Jan 19 8:00 200 EE
E E 450 Jan 15 1:10 201 EE
E MCH 11 Jan 21 10:20 211 MS
E MCH 13 Jan IT 8:00 SIT Willard .
ENGL 0 Jan IS 1:10 5 Sparka
ENGL 2 Jan 22 7:00 p.m. 203 Willard
ENGL 3-Jan 17 1:10 121 Sparka
E CMP 8 Jan 17 8:00 5 Sparks
E CMP 90 Jan 15 10:20 11 Sparka
E LIT 2.1.2 Jan 19 1:10 S Sparka
E LIT 2.3 Jan 22 10:20 5 Sparka
E LIT 2.6.7 Jan 21 8:30 5 Sparka
E LIT 2.8.9 Jan 17 10:20 6 Sparka
E LIT 4 Jan 15 10:20 15 Sparka
E LIT 5.2.3 Jan 19 10:20 8 Sparka
E LIT 28 Jan 17 10:20 111 Boucka
E LIT 30 Jan 17 10:20 15 Sparka
E LIT 43 Jan 22 8 ;00 15 Sparka
E LIT 60 Jan 16 10:20 12 Sparka
E LIT 73 Jan 21 8:00 6 Sparka
F N 20 Jan 17 10:20 108 Boucke
F N 120 Jan 22 1:10 106 Boucka
F N 150 Jan 19 10:20 10« Boucke
F N 351 Jan 10 10:20 212 Boucke
E N 450 Jan 17 10:29 212 Boucke
FOB 49 Jan 16 3:30 3 Forestry
FOR 421 Jan 16 10:20 3 Forestry
FR 1 Jan 17 8:00 124 Sparke
FR 2 Jan 16 8:00 5 Sparks
FR 4 Jan 18 1:10 6 Sparka
F T 20V Jan V 7 VO :20 201 Willard
INT O 300 Jan 15 3:30 5 Sparka
G H E 15 Jan 15 10:20 112 Osmond '
GEOG 1.1.8.10.11a.b,12 Jan 21 10:20 SOI
Willard
GEOG 1 4-.9 Jan 16 1:10 SOI Willard
GEOG 15 Jan 19 8:00 301 Willard
GEOG 20.1.2 Jan 17 2:00 220 Willard
GEOG 20.3 Jan 17 1:10 SOI Willard
GEOG 20.4 Jan 19 10:20 SOI Willard
GEOG 24.1-.6 Jan 10 10:20 SOI Willard
GEOG 24.7-.12 Jan 17 3:SO SOI Willard
GEOG 32 Jan 17 1:10 204 Willard
GEOG 480 Jan 16 1:10 204 Willard
GEOL 20 Jan 17 10:20 121 Ml
GEOL 21 Jan 21 3:30 225 Ml
GEOL 31 Jan 21 10:20 204 Willard
GEOL 451 Jan 19 1:10 225 Ml
GER 1 Jan 15 10:20 10 Sparka
GER 2 Jan 22 10:20 6 Sparka
GER 3 Jan 10 8:00 6 Sparks
GER 4 Jan 10 8:00 6 Sparks '
GREEK 25 Jan 19 3:39 $ Sparks
Repairs
Car Radios Television
Phonographs i Radios
television
service I
tenter A
State College TV
232 S. Aden St.
HL ED 126 Jan 16 8:09 302 Ree
HL ED 215 Jan 23 8:00 302 Rec
HIST 6.2.4.8 Jan 17 10:20 17 Sparka
HIST 6,3.5.7.8.9 Jan 20 8:00 16 Sparks
HIST 12 Jan 19 10:20 16 Sparks
HIST 16 Jan 16 1:10 16 Sparks
HIST 18 Jan 19 10:20 2 Carnegie
HIST 19 Jan 19 3:30 105 ME'
HIST 20 Jon 15 8:00 6 Sparks
HIST 21.1 Jan 16 8:00 12 Spark 3
HIST 21.2.5.7-.17 Jan 15 10:20-112 BL
HIST 30 Jan 17 3:30 B Sparka
HIST 410 Jan 19 8:00 5 Sparks
HIST 419 Jan 16 8:00 7 Sparks
HIST 427 Jan 15 8:00 5 Sparks
H ARTS 14 Jan 15 8:00 14 H Eo
H ARTS 240.1 Jan 16 8:00 209 Boucke
HM FE 319 Jan 15 8:00 209 Boucke
HM FE 439 Jan 19 3:30 209 Boucke
HORT 1 Jan 16 1:10 15 Tyson
H A 341 Jan ?1 10:20 209 Boucke
H A 440 Jan 20 10:20 209 Boucke
HS EQ 213 Jan 16 1:10 217 Boucke
I E 301.1.2.4 Jan 16 8:00 201 Eng C
1 E 301.3 Jan 17 8:00 201 Eng C
I E 327 Jan 17 10.20 201 Eng C
I E 335 Jan 17 10:20 204 Eng C
I E 402 Jan 15 1:10 201 Eng C
IN A 215 Jan 21 8:00 209 Boucke
IT l Jan 22 1:10 g Sparks
JOURN 6 Jan 20 3:30 209 Boucke
JOURN 13 Jan 15 1:10 2 Carnegie
JOURN 40 Jan 19 3:30 2 Carnegie
JOURN 55 Jan 16 8:00 8 Carnegie
JOURN 401 Jan 16 8:00 8 Carnegie
L SC 1 Jan 16 8:00 6 Library
MATH 6 Jan 20 1:10 301 Willard
MATH 41 Jan 19 10:20 202 Willard
MATH 42 Jan 19 3:30 208 Willard
MATH 406 Jan 19 7:00 p.m. 220 Willard
MATH 409 Jan 19 10:20 219 Willard
M B 31 Jan 15 10:20 301 Eng C
M E 60 Jan 19 10:20 306 Eng D
M E 64 Jan 17 1:10 300 Eng D
M E 103 Jan 21 10:20 105 M E
M E 409 Jan 16 1:10 300 Eng D
MET 59 Jan 17 8:00 225 M l
MET 200 Jan 23 8:00 201 Willard
METEO 300 Jan 16 3 ;30 201 Willard
MN PR 1 Jan 19 8:00 201 Willard
MTN 81 Jan 16 8:00 202 Willard
MNG 30 Jan 22 3:30 225 MI
MNG 31 Jan 21 1:10 225 M 1
MNG 401 Jan 19 8:00 225 M I
MUSIC 5 Jan 17 8:00 9 Sparks
NA ED 1.3.4 Jan 20 8:00 204 Burrowee
PHIL 1 Jan 15 7:00 p.m. 105 M K
PHIL 2 Jan 21 10:20 9 Sparks
PHIL 3 Jan 19 8:00 13 Sparks
PHIL 21.2 Jan 16 10:20 15 Sparks
PH ED 68 Jan 21 10:20 241 Rec
PHYS 100 Jan 19 1:10 104 Osmond
PHYS 216 Jan 19 3:30 104 Osmond
PHYS 236 Jan 20 3 -.30 105 Osmond
PHYS 237 Jan 15 10:20 111 Boucke
PHYS 400 Jan 20 1:10 113 Osmond
PHYS 411 Jan 17 8:00 109 Osmond
PHYS 458 Jan 19 3:30 106 Osmond
PL SC 3 Jan 19 1:10 6 Sparks
PL SC 4 Jan 16 1:10 217 Willard
PL SC 10 Jan 16 10:20 6 Sparks
PL SC 20 Jan 17 7:00 p.m. 6 Sparka
PL SC 401 Jan 17 8:00 6 Sparks
PHI Jan 16 7:00 p.m. 104 Weaver
PSY 2.1.2 Jan 16 8 :00 303 Willard
PSY 14 Jan 16 1:10 5 Sparks
PSY 21 Jan 19 10:20 1 Sparks
PSY 412 Jan 15 10 :20 7 Sparks
PSY 416 Jan 15 10:20 8 Sparks
PSY 417.1 Jan 19 10:20 7 Sparks
PSY 425 Jan 19 3:30 8 Sparks
PSY 429 Jan 16 3:30 7 Sparka
PSY 431 Jan 16 8:00 1 Sparka
PSY 441 Jan 20 1:10 1 Sparks
RL ST 18 Jan IS 3 :30 1 Sparks
R SOC 11 Jan 16 10:20 202 Weaver
RUS 1 Jan IT 8:00 203 Willard
SOC 1.1-.18 Jan 15 10:20 Sa Sparks
SOC 1.20.21 Jan 17 10:20 8a Sparks
80C 3 Jan 19 8:00 8a Sparks
SOC 12 Jan 17 8:00 8a Sparks
SOC 19 Jan 17 1:10 15 Sparks
SOO 22 Jan 19 1:10 8a Sparka
SPAN 1 Jan 15 8:00 110 Osmond
SPAN 2 Jan 21 10:20 2 Sparks
SPCH 203 Jan 17 8:00 14 Sparks
SP ED 440 Jan 17 3:30 4 Sparks
THEA 62 Jan 15 1:10 109 Boucke
TYP 1.5 Jan 19 8:00 117 Boucke
ZOOL S Jan 16 1:10 206 Armsby
ZOOL 25 Jan 21 8:00 206 Armsby
ZOOL 26 Jan 17 8:00 206 Armsby
ZOOL 41 Jan 19,7:00 p.m. 206 Armsby
Speech Prof Honored
At Chicago Convention
The late Joseph F. O’Brien,
professor of public speaking at
the University until his death on
Feb. 14, 1958, was honored re
cently at a convention of the
Speech Association of America in
Chicago, 111.
William S. Tracey, University
of Pittsburgh, presented a paper
titled: “Joseph F. O’Brien, Par
liamentarian."
l/Sawat-s |
iHi (Males |
§ Surprise your holiday hos- §
1 tess with a gift-wrapped |
1 box of assorted handmade 1
1 chocolates sent by YOU, f
f§ her most welcomed guest. |
| Send a box today! §
1 1
1 The Candy Cane 1
a “Between the Movies " f§
31UI(I!«« tunmiS
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Professors
To Escort
Seminars
Two faculty members will ac
company each of the three Euro
pean seminars to be sponsored by
the University Christian Associa
tion next summer.
The Rev. Hal Leiper, associate
director of the UCA, and Mrs.
Helen M. Buchanan, instructor of
family relationships, will go on
the “Western Europe” seminar.
This trip is scheduled from
July 8 to Aug. 25. Students will
visit England, France, Italy, West
Germany, Switzerland and the
Netherlands.
Edwin W. Zoller, professor of
art, and Mrs. Laurama P. Pixton
will accompany students on the
"Perspective on the Arts” semi
nar.
Mrs. Pixton is the wife of John
Pixton, assistant administrative
head of the Ogontz Center.
This seminar will be held from
July 8 to Aug. 26 and will center
around a study of ’ the arts in
England, Scotland, France, Italy,
Switzerland, West Germany and
the Netherlands.
Samuel N. Gibson, executive di
rector of the UCA and the Rev.
John Whitney, pastor of St. An
drews Episcopal church in State
College, will accompany students
on the “Europe 1959" seminar.
This trip, scheduled for June 17
to Aug. 5, will be spent in Eng
land, France, Austria, Italy, Swit
zerland, Berlin, West Germany
and Poland.
Students interested in going on
any of xhese seminars may con
tact Gibson at ADams 8-8441,
ext. 54.
'Lectern' Series--
(Continued from page one)
sus anli-inlellecfualism and the
pari* they play in a democratic
society. The role of the univer
sity in tills complex Is also dis
cussed by Dr, Morse,
Dr. Morse, already well known
in the academic world, will be
even more so with the publication
in the spring of his book, “The
Sympathetic Alien: James Joyce
and Catholicism," New York Uni
versity Press.
Six of the chapters in his forth
coming book have appeared in
scholarly journals, including,
“Modern Philology,” “English Lit
erary History,” “PMPA" (Publi
cations of the Modern Language
Association) and “The James
Joyce Review.”
His book, Dr. Morse said, is not
biographical but is chiefly an
analysis of Joyce’s works with a
view to showing the influence of
his Catholic education on his
writing.
Joyce, who grew up in Jesuit
schools and seriously consid
ered studying lor the priest
hood, Dr. Morse said, later be
came a bitter anii-Catholic.
Nevertheless, according to Dr.
Morse, Joyce did have a full Cath
olic educational background and
it is the purpose of his book to
show how he was influenced by
such Catholic writers as Ambrose,
Jerome, Augustine, John Scotus
Erigena, William Ockham and
Thomas Aquinas.
|lilllllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllllillllllUllllllllllllllllllllllllll|lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|
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1 Association Now 1
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| SPECIAL LIFE MEMBERSHIP FEE-$7O f
( If You Join on or Before January 26 §
§ Coma to: =
I The Alumni Office |
I 104 OLD MAIN . |
"GOD AND MAN IN ART,” being toured by Sandra Needle, left,
and Betsy Hoekstra, will remain on display in the Hetzel Union
Building until Jan. 15.
Space Age
Is Age-Old
By EDDIE CHUN
Science Reporter
For centuries man regarded the moon as something
unattainable, but today he looks to it as something to conquer.
Will he make it? How long will it be before he reaches his
goal?
In 1957, Russia’s leading rocket expert, Professor Kirill
Stanyukovich of the Baumann
Institute of Technology in Mos
cow, predicted human beings
would te on the moon by 1960
and on the planet Mars by 1970.
However, before man can con
quer space and the moon, scien
tists need information to prepare
the way. Successful launchings of
American and Russian satellites
have provided them with the
needed information and have giv
en them some new data to work
with.'
The old air-density formula
had to be junked when instru
ments aboard the Army's Ex
plorer reported that in places
the atmosphere was 14 times
denser than scientists believed.
The instruments also showed
that temperatures in space fluc
tuate wildly, going to extremes
in heat and cold.
This satellite also reported the
presence of dusty spaceways over
the polar areas. In these regions,
micrometeorites are few and
woud not be too serious a hazard
in launching a spaceship.
Dr. J. G. Porter of the Royal
Greenwich Observatory in Sus
sex, England has been reported
to believe a trip to the moon
could be made in 10 hours. This
would' be the time for a direct
power flight from Earth at the
25,000 mph speed needed to es
cape the gravitational pull.
According to a recent article
Goal
Goal
in “Life” magazine, it is believed
that the moon once had an atmos
phere as the earth. However,-the
gases escaped into space because
the moon didn't have a strong
enough gravitational pull to hold
the fast moving gas molecules.
Therefore there is no wind or
water on the moon because of
the lack of atmospheric mole
cules. Temperatures can go up to
214 degrees Fahrenheit in the
sun and -243 degrees Fahrenheit
in the shade.
The moon is a lunar vacuum;
sound waves do not carry on the
moon. In certain ways, the moon
could be considered a high
vacuum, germ-free laboratory for
scientists.
Authors Ralph Smith and A*-
(Continued on page eight)
PAGE FIVE