PAGE EIGHT Dorms Seen Too Small For Future Even with the planned resi• derive hall construction, the University will probably be able to house only one-half of the student body on campus in the future. Plesenily only 6700 students 01 the nearly 15.000 enrolled at the roam campus are housed in Urn. vcreity fay ilrttes. Only 3400 of those in resi dence halls are men. Fifty-five fraternity houses and private facilities house about 8000 stu dents. "It has been only in accent years that the University has been able to accommodate as many students as it doe-. now in campus halls," Otto E Mueller director of housing, said. In 1940 the Untver•ity could accommodate only 1100 students on campus. Most of the• e stu dents were women. A group of eight residence and dining halls which will accommodate 1000 men and 1000 women are under construc tion on east campus. They will be ready next fall. Ground has been broken for another group which will house 1000 women. They will open in the fall of 1961. This construction. plus 216 apartments for implied gi aduate students, will enable 9994 stu dents to live on campus in 1961 If planned construction continues this number will rise to nearly 12,000 in 1965 and nearly 17,000 in 1970, Mueller said. "Even then," Mueller said. "the University will be housing only about 50 per cent of its student population since campus enroll ment is expected to reach 20,000 in 1965 and climb to as high as 30,000 in 1970." Bush to Join Journ Faculty George S. Bush will inin the faculty of the School of Inu-nal .l..rn January I, specialii;n" it Tnapavine and photo-ioucr ,, ticm eon rSeS. Hugh is now assist-nt nrnfes sor of journalism at the Univer sity of rtiftnnesota, The P' , -rd ef Trustees has approver! h , - •,,i -pointment as associate t ref- - of journalism. Eugen Goodwin. It , School of Journalism P • will bring. to Penn S'-te a 1 ,,, t1 and vaned backgrou , v ) ‘ , l paner reporting, ma and publishing, free ‘• and photography. I teaching. Born in Vienna, Austna he holds Bachelor of Prts and Mas ter of Arts degree , - from Wayne "University, Drtimi lle worked for a'" Detroit News from 1941 to 1943 After thrrP years with the U.S Army's Of fice of Strategic Services, he re tinned to the News as a reporter m 1946. 11e switched to the De troit Free Press the following No vermber until he left to join the staff of the San Francisco Exam iner in 1951. He resigned from the Exam iner in 1953 to become co-pub• lisher and executive editor of three picture-weeklies and a re gional magazine featuring art photography. He joined the School of Jouralism faculty at the Univerlity of Minnesota in Sep tember. 1956 Students Urged to Move Cars Parked in Lot 83 The Campus Patrol office issue(' a warning last night that students with cars narked on the south edge of parking area 83 should move their cars back towards the Ruling Stables. Construction workers will be gin dynamiting along the south edge of the lot Wednesday am' the ,cart might be damaged by flying debris. FOR GOOD RESULTS USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS pi _gory. ,agarin give, to the entrants in the egg race during the Horse Show held Sunday at the Univeisity Stables. A total of 64 ribbons were awarded in the 12 events. 64 Ribbons Given At Fall Horse Show Sixty-four ribbons were awarded at the annual fall horse ,how put on by the Riding Club and the 4-H Horse and Pony Club riders of Centre County held Sunday afternoon at the University stables. There were six ribbons awarded in each of the 12 events but there were two events which I only had five entries. Sams Will Speak 1 Jess Darlington, assistant herds ! man, and Captain Gregory A On Robert Frost iGagarin, University riding in- Dr Henry W. Sams, the new structor, judged the events. head of the Department of Eng- In the open jumper class, liA. will address the Belles Let-' which was judged on the jump- Ittes Club at 7 tonight in Sim- ing performance of the horse mons main lounge. and the fewest number of faults ' Sams will speak on "Robert committed, Emy Kate, a mem- Frost: Poetry and a Poet." Frost her of the Riding Club, won will appear on the campus Satur-, first place and second place day .as pact of the Artists Series was won by Diane Barnhart, an progi am alumna and also a member of Sams holds both a bachelors the Riding Club. land a masters degree from Ober-! The International Horsemanship lin College and a doctorate from class was won by Sara Lee Orton the University of North Caro-'of the Riding Club, with Jane lira, Before coming to the Uni - 'Hoffman, a high school student versitY , he was a member of the, from State College but a mem frculty of the University of Chi- ber of the Riding Club, coming in ca go. second. The Western Horsemanship Thespian Drama Group class was won by Sharon Wood. a member of the Riding Club; El- Taps 12 New Members 'wood Williams Jr., from the 4-H Twelve students have been Horse and Pony Club, won second tapped for Thespians national place. Lucy Kellor, Riding Club. clionla organization. won first place in the Beginners The are Marilyn West, jayne ,Horsemanship class, and Lee Bea y Crowl, Linda Brinsley, Carmella son, also a high school member LaSpada„lames Bull, Marilyn of the Riding Club, placed second. O'Brien, Edwina Hill, Herbert Samuel Everhartis, a 4-H Decked, Susan Brown, Phyllis member, and Emy Katz won Newmark, Gary Patterson and first and second places in the 9Tehatd Frantz bareback dollar class which was Initiation will take place Nov ' a test of the rider being able to 8 at the annual fall banquet. ; keep a dollar bill under him as t —Federal Hall in New York . Everhaitis also won first place City served as the first Capitol in the egg race with Jan Patter of the United States, after the son of the Riding Club placing Constitution was adopted. (Continued on page twelve) MIMI THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA By CORDIE LEWIS i he rode bareback Hatmen to Sponser Reception for Team The Men's Hat Association will organize a reception for the football team when they return at 4 p.m. Sunday from the Penn State - Illinois game. Hatmen will start the reception with a motorcade through the streets led by Acacia's model-T Ford. A combo will be formed to play at Recreation Hall where a pub-' lic address system will be set up.' All those at the reception will form an honor arch for the team' when it finally arrives. Plans are also being made for a master of ceremonies and Frank Gullo, professor of music, will be asked to lead the crowd in songs. Hatmen at their meeting Sun day also decided to usher for Art ists Series programs on Decem ber 13, March 9, and April 27. They were asked by the Artists Series Committee to usher on May 10 but they cannot accept because new representatives to the association will be chosen be fore that time. Stanley Foster, president of the association, will draw up the group constitution and it will be read at 8:30 p.m. to morrow at the meeting at Sig ma Chi. The constitution will include Pennsylvania State University campus publi cations unite with newspapers all over the country in agreeing that "the press, as the recognized medium for informing the people, should be given every opportunity_ to obtain the facts. Only after every door closed by a _ public official has been opened to the press, shall we have complete freedom of infor mation," WDFM Froth Central Promotion Agency TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1959 1000 People Attend Chordette Concert Approximately 1000 people at tended the Chordettes Concert Sunday at Recreation Hall. According to Carmella La- Spada, general chairman of Unit ed Nations Weekend, the World University Service which spon sored the concert will break even. Although all of the ticket money has not yet been collected and all of the donations are not in, it has been estimated that the World University Service did not lose money on the concert. the three purposes of the associa tion—to co-ordinate tapping dates and the tapping system, to co ordinate group service projects, and to make functions of the as sociation honorary as well as service. Engineer Ag Hill Breeze Bus Ad Bulletin News and Views Student Handbook The Daily Collegian LaVie Pivot
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers