WEDNESDAY, MARCH Druckm Questi "If I leave you Druckman, associat in his speech, "Wh:• Druckman was Last Lecture Serie- Informal Now in E For 176 C. A total of 176 fry upperclass women ail, informal sorority rus week period which bef Twenty-seven regV in the last week ar automatically eligil formal rushing regist Of those register freshmen, 52 are sop 12 are juniors. Rushees may atten chatter dates in so from 1 until 5 p.m. a until 8 p.m. every • cept Wednesday. Invitations will be issued by sorority members who will slip them under rushees' doors. They must be answered by 1 p.m. of the following day at the dean of women's office in 105 Old Main. Bids may be sent out beginning March 9, and rushees must an swer them within three days. Bids which are received on March 16 may be answered up until March 19. Rushees may be rib boned immediately after accept ing bids. A semi-strict silence will be in effect until a rushee answers her bid. Watercolor Show Opens At Ogontz Art Gallery A watercolor exhibit opened yesterday in the Sutherland Hall Gallery at the Ogontz Campus In Abington. . . The works in the - exhibit are done by nationally known local and New York artists and each is from the representational field— no abstracts. The gallery is open to the public from 9 an. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. The show will run until March 20. Stays Toist and firm throughout your shave! regu4r or new mentholated Take your choice of new, cool mentholated or regular Smooth Shave. :toth have rich, thick Old Spice quality. lather that won't dry up before you've finished shaving. Both soften yo r beard instantly—end razor drag corn. pletely. For the closest, cleanest, quickest shaves ... try Old Spice Sm.. h Shave! - 100 each 4, 1959 Would Leave s in Last Lecture By KATIE DAVIS with anything, it is questions," Aaron • professor of philosophy said last night t Next?" the second speaker in Mortar Board's In this series each professor is asked to give his lecture as if it were the last in his career. "In this world are there no new ways to look at things?" Druck man asked as his first question. "Ou:. of new ways to look at things is there the possibility to manufacture .new values?" Druckman said he believes new values can be manufac tured which can become un conscious and buried in life. He gave the example of our pres ent values of love and justice for complete strangers, an idea which was foreign to the Greeks and other past generations. Secondly he asked, "What sup port can we give so that we can be assured that our world will, not be forgotten?" He pointed out that the theme, of our era is science. Very few authors or artists have seen fit to, preserve this theme in their works, Aso that we will be remembered in the ages to come. "What we have will pass away I unless it is enshrined by the poet," ,Druckman said. The third question that he would pose in his last lecture is "How can business and in dustry become the source of values and not goods?" He said that these could be infinite sources as such important in stitutions of our life but pres ently are not. Ile also said that he believed life can take on meaning other than at the moment of death. Death is not a preferred position Ito life. lush fect eds tshman and eligible for h in the 2- an Monday, tered with d 149 were le through •ation. d, 112 are mores and 1. a series of ority suites d from 6:30 weekday ex- We will never be able to find airtight arguments or answers to these questions or others, he said, they remain for all to think about in trying to discover the meaning of life. "I do not know the answers," he concluded. Foundation Official Dies Miss Vesta Ruth Fye, adminis trative assistant for the Penn State Foundation, died at her home Feb. 26. She was 40-. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Television's Effectiveness Investigated The Division of Academic Re search and Services is conducting research on the effectiveness of television and other means of communication on public opin ion. The division has received a $16,000 grant from the Television Bureau of Advertising, Inc., to carry on the study. It is expected that experiments will involve Central Pennsylvania audiences on open-circuit tele vision, and closed circuit pro grams on the campus with stu dents participating. A bibliography covering the fields of mass communication is being prepared by the division. It includes television, radio and motion pictures. Later experi ments will be conducted on the effectiveness of mass communi cation media in learning and oth er behavioral changes. With this background, the re searchers will concentrate on tele vision as a medium' of mass com munication and education. Dr. Frank Hartman, research associate, is coordinator of the project. Two graduate students, John Hundleby, a candidate for a doctor of philosophy degree in psychology, and Miss Hannah Schatter, who is working for a master of science degree in psy chology, are participating in the research effort. About 10 undergraduate psy chology students are assisting in the preparation of the bibliog raphy which began in September. Dr. Leland Beik, assistant pro fessor of marketing, is serving as a consultant. Tag Day— (Continued from page one) each, will be available to sopho mores only today and tomorrow. After that they will be available to everyone. , Sharp will be on hand for the dance •to watch while a queen, selected from five finalists, is crowned. The finalists, all sopho mores, are: Joni Karlow, educa tion major from Atlas; Judy Nor ton, education major from Merlon Station; Susan Sherman, educa tion major from Syracuse, N.Y.; Betty Kohudic, psychology ma jor from Frachville, and Marilyn Siefert, arts and letters major from Allison Park. ON cl'pm' SMOOTH SHAVE by SHULTON Few Students Seek Credits by Exams By CAROL BLAKESLEE See Editorial on page 4 Only a handful of students each year take advantage of a Univer sity program to get credit by examination, according to Dr. Robert G. Bernreuter, special as sistant for student affairs. The program is primarily in tended to benefit students who have done work in absentia, at another school, but Bernreuter said there is "no reason at all why a student could not study for a course• during the summer and get credit for it by taking an exam." The Senate regulation, L-4, making credit by examination possible, has been in effect for about 25 years, Bernreuter said. However, he said, students who have taken part in the program have almost always taken a course in some other school whose credits are not accept able at the University. A great number of them are graduate students, although ered- liummilimmilimmiimmimmimmiummiummunimmiummiumei Dinners Served Nightly = = = a , = 1 I anglewood Acres I = _ r. . = _ = Steaks Spaghetti ' Lobster E = Shrimp Pizzai Sandwiches Selected Beverages = For Reservations Ca ll -- Elgin 5-4584 - -- DANCING NO MINORS = = 5 Jacksonville Rd. -- it% Miles From Bellefonte ' 3 imommiimmiltimmumilitutimmiiimitimmitimumtuttmmemmiis: This Program is designed to develop young, inex perienced men for careers in life insurance sales and sales management. It provides an initial train ing period of 8 1 / 2 months (including one month at a Home Office School) before the men move into full sales work. Those trainees who are Interested in and who are found qualified for management responsibility are assured of ample opportunity to move on to such work in either our field offices or in the Home Office after an initial period in sales. A limited number of attractive opportunities are also available at the Home Office for Actuarial Trainees and Administrative Trainees. The Connecticut Mutual is a 113-year-old com pany with 500,000 policyholder-members and over four billion dollars of life insurance in force. Aggressive expansion plans provide unusual oppor tunities for the limited number of men accepted each year. Arrange with the placement office for au inter view with: Connecticut Mutual Life INSURANCE COMPANY• HARTFORD its acquired by examination are acceptable for any degree if the student has met other require ments for the desired degree. A candidate for a bachelor's de gree, for example, must have earned at least 60 of the last 75 credits required in his curriculum by enrollment in courses on cam pus, but the rest may be obtained by examination if the student wishes. To get permission to take an examination for credit, a stu dent must have the authorisa tion of both his dean and the head of the department in which the course is taught. Credit for the course will not be granted unless the student passes the examination with a grade of C or higher. If the grade is C or higher, according to Sen ate regulations, it will be reported as "Ex" only. There is a $1 fee for each credit obtained by examination except for graduate students and anyone presenting a written waiver from the Dean of Admissions. Frank Carlucci PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers