Ike C Steel 'utions Firms ' (IP)—Piesident ioned the steel workers yester ited States can nd do nothing" Ages and prices Iflationary spiral. s e n bower was stand in urging it and the union sense, wisdom lip or risk goy s II Is on profits, WASHINGTO Eisenhower eau industry and its day that "the U nal stand still it they push upward in an it Essentially, E taking no new both manageme to display goo' and statesmans ernment contr prices and pay But his w o r tional impact b: timing. Contract Ii s carried addi cause of their negotiations be New York. The ent told a news e felt by all in people. gan yesterday i results, the Presi conference, will dustry and all th "So, therefore," again insist tha Ii e said, "1 would the whole 175 ht to make clear erned about this s not something nding aside and hurt." million of us out that we are cone matter and this r where we, are st seeing ourselves It was a news , onference which circled around a ong a score of topics, domestic and internation al. It focused o, individuals as much as on events. From the big power foreign ministers' conference opening next week in Geneva, Eisen hower discussed progress toward settling East-West differences. If anything does develop that en larges the hope for decreasing world tensions, he said, then a summit meeting would become a foregone conclusion. Bringing in the individual ele ment, Eisenhower said that would be so because as he has said before— only Premier Nikita Khrushchev can speak authorita tively for the Soviet Union. Secretary of Commerce Lewis L. Strauss and Sir Winston Churchill of -Britain figured prominently in the session with newsmen. Warm Weather Continues Today Only minor changes, which will cause the temperatures to rise a little higher each day, are expected in the weather during the next few days. Today will be the fifth consec utive day with temperatures ex ceeding 75 degrees. Sunny and warm weather is expected today with afternoon temperatures reaching 83 degrees. Tonight should be fair and con tinued mild with a low of 55 de grees. An increase in humidity along with warmer temperatures will result in uncomfortable condi tions iOI7Ir4MW, However, show ers and iderstorms may de velop late in the day and bring relief from the heat. A high of 88 degrees is expected. AIM Indie Awards To Be Announced The Association of Independent Men , will announce its awards for outstanding senior independent men and for the outstanding on=campus living unit at the AIM : -Leonides i. banquet to be h ld May 13 at Dr. Henry inch, professo] "The Responsibility of Eggheads to Blockheads and Vice Versa." The outgoing presidents of AIM and Leonides will both review the work done by their respec tive Organizations during the past year. The AIM Outstanding Senior Independent Award is given on the basis of a student's contri bution to the association and to independent men in general, according to Harald Sandstrom. presideni The award will not necessarily be given to a past member of the AIM Board of Governors and not all the nom inees are from the board, he added. The nominees are Robert La- Bar, Donald Denriis, Stafford Fri day, William Schimpf and Mi chael Cohick. Nomineei for the Outstanding ------ ;1 q .„,,,, ..: ';, 0 c 1 r 4 at e ig , f i , r x'' ,: ‘ ,"..: A . ~.' Lul l ...k.,,__ VOL. 59. No. 136 Senate Will Consider Revision of Frosh Year —Collegian Photo by John Restage RETIRING DEAN OF WOMEN PEARL 0. WESTON accepts plaque presented to her by Mrs. Sy Barish, adviser to Phi Sigma Sigma. At right is Carol Dominick, president of the Council. Donovan Asks Stricter Requirements For Proposed Check Cashing Agency George L. Donovan, coordin- , ator of student affairs, cau tioned the Freshman Advisory Board to make identification requirements stricter in its proposed plan for a Student Check Cashing Agency. Donovan suggested in a meet ing yesterday afternoon, with Marcus Katzen, freshman in bus iness administration from Sykes ville, and Barry Kesselman, fresh man in electrical engineering from he Eutaw House. of philosophy, will speak on Non-Senior Indpendent Award are Carl Smith, David Byers, Ho ward Byers, Frank Pearson, 'Har ald Sandstrom, Douglas Pollak, Anthony Cillo and Anthony Sarli. Contenders for the Outstanding Independent Athlete Award are Donald Littlewood, Theodore Ku bista- and John Tuller. An outstanding Senior Inde pendent Scholarship will be given to the senior with the 'highest grade point average. Sandstrom said there had been no tie for the scholarship award. The Outstanding Living Unit Award will be won by either Nit tany 43 or Hamilton 2. Nominees from each living area are selected on a point basis by their councils, and the AIM executive council makes the final decision. FOR A BETTER STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 6. 1959 Chester, that checks over $25 ( should not be honored on week -1 ends. Katzen will present the plan to the Student Government Assoeia tion Assembly at 7:30 p.m. tomor 'row for approval. Donovan stressed again that the idea for the agency is a good one, but there are some details to be worked out. He said that a driver's license,i meal ticket, or draft card, as well 'as the student's matriculation card, should be presented for identification. Donovan said that he was not worried so much about students passing bad checks or overdraw-, ' ing their bank accounts. The big thing to be concerned about, he warned, is the person who travels about the country looking for a "soft" place to pass a bad check. Donovan also suggested that the limit for personal checks should be $25 instead of $35. On weekends, he said, the SC. ' CA should not cash checks which are over $25. There is too much risk that the agency would get a run of, bad checks or of very large: checks, he said, and would not. `be able to get additional funds until the next Monday. Donovan stuck to his idea that a few paid workers would be able to run the SCCA better than a larger group of students. He said he still feels that the SCCA should not be an "activity." Katzen said the bill he will ask the Assembly to approve tomorrow will have a few University Will Award Graduate School Grants Several University Graduate School sponsored scholarships for fall may be applied for during May and June. The value of these scholarships is $175 per semester for state residents and $375 per semester for out-of-state students. Application should be made to the Dean of the Graduate School. PENN changes, but that it will be es sentially the same as planned. •He said the limit on personal checks would be set at $25 in stead of $35. Also, he said, any check over $25 would not be cashed on Friday, Saturday or Sunday. The requirement for identifica tion, he said, would be tightened to include a matriculation card plus a driver's license, meal tick et or draft card. Katzen will ask the Assembly to loan his committee $4OOO to get the SCCA started. Extension Will Ease Traffic congestion in the eastern part of State College will be eased when an extension of S. Garner St. is con structed between College and Beaver Ayes. State College Borough Council formally approved con struction of the street Monday night and ordered proceedings started to acquire property needed in the construction area. At present, Garner St. ends at Beaver Ave., leaving only Brown Alley to carry traffic north to College Ave. There is no provi sion for south bound traffic. In approving plans for the new street, Council indicated it will have to seize by eminent domain part of the Ralph Weaver pz-ip erty on W. Beaver Ave. Notice of a date and time for protests on this action have been posted. Final action on the ordi nance cannot come until 28 days have passed. Council approved an agreement with Sidney Friedman, who owns property in the area where the I street will be built. Friedman will move the Sara] Kauffman house and give to the Borough his lease rights to the property. He will also give tri langles of land on his Beaver Ave. and College Ave. property,to the rgiatt Curriculum Choice May Be Dropped By NEAL FRIEDMAN Freshmen entering the Uni versity within the next few years may no longer enroll in a specific curriculum, but in stead enter one of several com mon freshman year programs sugested by the Senate Com mittee on Educational Policy. The University Senate will hear a committee recommendation to morrow suggesting that the pres ent system be abandoned in favor of a common freshman year pro gram. Under the proposed plan, ad mission to the University would not necessarily be dependent up on the student's curriculum choice, as is sometimes the case, accoid ing to the committee. The committee's ultimate goal is one technical and one non• technical program. but they ha've suggested five programs for the present. They are: *Physical science arid mathe matics •Geological sciences • Social sciences • Humanities , * Fine Arts Also included in the plan is the establishment of an adminis trative unit having no faculty or instructional functions. It would simply act as the assignment cen ter and coordinator of the pro grams, utilizing advisers from all colleges. No freshmen, either here or at the Commonwealth Campuses, would be assigned to any specific curriculum or college during his freshman year, but would remain under general University three tion. A program similar to this -is already in effect in the College of Engineering and Architecture. Continued on page five of Street Traffic Borough. The triangles are neces sary because S. Garner will curve down from Beaver to College Ave. to intersect with Shortlidge Rd., from the University campus. The Borough will intersect Brown Alley at Garner St.; va tate a portion of Brown and Cal der Alleys between Friedman's i properties; fill parking lots to the level of the new street; and pro- Nide no setback regulations for businesses on Garner St. be tween College Ave. and Calder Alley. The new street will be 46 feet wide, 32 feet of it paved, and will include sidewalks. The action to create the new street was recommended two years' ago by the Planning Com mission as a means of easing the traffic bottlenecks in State Col lege. FIVE CENTS