Lions to Meet Illinois Tod Lions to Attempt to 0.1 r 4 a i ~,..,,, , T o ti rg i att Mini 3 Game Win S By SANDY PADWE aeo Collegian S s Edito r VOL. 60, No. 29 STATE COLLEGE, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 24. 1959 FIVE CENTS Mille 'Clos Scheduling clas riculums in the sar getting to classes University Schedul Due to the ev Flag R To Begin UN Fete The University's observance of United Nations Day will begin at 11 a.m. today at the south court of the Hetzel Union Building when the flags of 50 nations represented on cam pus will be raised in honor of the occasion. At this ceremony, a plaque commemorating World Refugee Year will be dedicated at the foot of a sweet gum tree planted last spring in soil brought from several Pan-American countries. The dedication plaque reads: "This tree is a symbol of our united efforts to meet the hu manitarian challenge of World Refugee Year and to maintain international peace. The Stu dents of the Pennsylvania State University." The celebration will continue at 2 . 30 p.m. when a Community Peace Conference will be held in the HUB ballroom. United Nations dinners with appropriate table decorations will be held at 5:30 tonight in campus residence halls, the HUB Terrace Room and - fraternities. The climax of the United Na tions celebration will be the presentation of the musical show, "Getting to Know You," from 8 to 10 p.m. in Schwab Auditorium. The Chapel Choir, Acacia Quar tet, Thespians Chorus and many of the 210 international students enrolled at the University will participate in the program. Steel Contract Talks To Resume Today PITTSBURGH (I)—The United Steel workers and the steel industry's four-man negotiating team agreed last night to resume contract talks Saturday 2 p.m. EDT in efforts to end the 101-day nationwide steel strike. The new round of talks were scheduled in rapid fire developments that saw both sides requesting meetings. The union asked the industry to meet Monday. The industry re plied it would like to get started Saturday. Both parties are under directive from the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals to resume bargaining quickly. While the negotiations were being scheduled; Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell urged negotiations "around the clock until an agreement is reached." USW President David J. Mc- Donald sent invitations to 96 steel companies to meet with the union FOR A BETTER FENN STATE Proposes r Classes' I=y SUSIE LINKROUM :es for required courses in specific cur e area may help relieve the problem of .romptly, according to John E. Miller, rig Officer. 1 r-increasing enrollmen, the University has had to increase the physical size of the campus, he said. Con sequently, it is becoming more difficult for students to be on time to classes in the ten minutes al lowed. ,view The Scheduling Office, Miller said, is developing a plan where by students can attend then• re quired cou•'ses in the same build ing or least in the same area of campus. - The system will require a lot of research, he said. In order to make the plan feasible, re quired courses in each curricu lum, available hours and rooms, the number of professors and the number of students must be taken into consideration. All these factors must then be wov en into a pattern, in order to have classes closer together. "The system will be put into ef fect next fall, if all arrangements for it are completed," Miller said. The students would have to fol low the pattern of required courses, however, in order to have their classes closer to one another. For example, students who are in the curriculum of arts and letters and are required to take three specific courses in a spe cific semester will have those classes scheduled in the same area. If they deviate from the pattern, they will have to suf fer the consequences of possi bly having a long distance between classes. This system could limit the stu dent's present choice of hours, Miller said. If a student wished to take the required course at a different hour than the one in the curriculum pattern, it is pos sible that it would be some dis tance from his other classes, he said. Another exception to the sys tem is that some courses which require special facilities such as labor at or y or demonstration equipment may have to be sched uled away from the other classes. in Pittsburgh Monday. All were named as defendants in a govern ment requests for a Taft-Hartley injunction. Saturday's talks will bring to gether the union's four-man nego tiating team and a four-member team that has represented indus try in most of the talks since they began last Ma;•. - The union's invitation Fri day called for separate meetings with each of the 96 companies closed by ,the strike. McDonald said he still hopes to hold indi vidual meetings with—each fiat► Monday. —CoWean Photo by Cunard Motin THE WORLD'S ENCHANTING CUSTOMS were brought to the foreground at the UN festival held last night in the HUB ballroom. The display began the observance of United Nations Weekend at the University. Clocks Go Back; Daylight Time Ends Daylight Saving Time - will end tonight making this week end the longest of the year. , Clocks will be set back an hour at 2 a.m. Centre County will revert I five months of DST. This wil alike to make use of the "extra" hour that they put in reserve back in May. Beginning on Monday students will be able to go to their 8 o'- clock's in daylight, instead of the semi-dark conditions of the past few weeks. However, those stu dents having 4 o'clock classes will be leaving them in the dark, start ing next week. This is the first year that any towns in Central Pennsylvania retained DST info October. Pre viously the clocks were .set back in the latter part of Sep tember. Beginning with Church serv ices Sunday and continuing into the opening of businesses on Mon day, all county functions will re turn to Standard Time. Greyhound and Edwards Lakes to-Sea bus lines have made sched ule adjustments to go with Stan dard Time. The following is the schedule that will now be in use: •Westbound for Pittsburgh 7:49 a.m.; west via Dußois, 9:35 a.m.; west, 6:24 p.m.; west 8:19 p m.; weekends, Friday to Sun day, 8:19 p.m. • For Harrisburg, 9:36 a.m. and 10:16 p.m. weekdays, 4:36 p.m. Friday through Sunday. For Sun bury, 10:15 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 5 p.m. Friday to Sun day. Cool, Dry Weather Predicted By Lion A cooler drier air mass will bring gradually clearing skies and cooler weather to this area this afternoon and tonight. Warm and humid conditions with occasional rain will persist this morning, but will give way to cloudy, windy and cooler weather this afternoon. Today's high will he reached around noon and it should be 70 degrees. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 24 Penn State's Nittany Lions will carry the football prestige of the East against the mighty Midwest today when they meet Illinois here at 2 p.m. in Municipal Stadium. The Lions go into today's game with a 5-0 record and an eighth 'place national ranking, but the `Fighting Mini rule a one touch down favorite. Ray Eliot's crew brings a 3-1 mark into this afternoon's con test. They will be after their 1 fourth straight win, having top -1 ped Army, Ohio State, and Minnesota in their last three outings. Illinois' only loss was to Indi ana, 20-0, on opening clay. The Illini . have been improving with every game and are very much ui the running for the Big Ten Title and a trip to the Rose Bowl. I It's no secret that Penn State also has bowl aspirations and a !win today would help the Lion cause quite a bit. The Lions hold wins over Missouri, Colgate, Army and Boston University so far this year. Penn State's hopes this after noon will depend on their great all-around quarterback Richie Lucas. Hoak poses as a double threat to the tough Illini defense be cause of his rushing and pass receiving ability. He is the second leading ground gainer on the. Nittany squad with a 4.1 average. In the pass catch ing department he's second too, with eight completions for 105 Two Students Arrainged ' , yards. The Penn State line which has For _Traffic Violations ,the job of stopping some of the 'fastest backs in the Midwest, has Two students were arraigned,'Lucas' number one target Norm before Justice of the Peace Wil,Neff at right end and Henry Op liam P. Bell this week for trafficperman at the other terminal. violations. , Torn Mulraney and Andy Styn- o Eastern Standard Time after I allow residents and students Thomas L. McQuilkin. sopho-'---: -- more in business administration' ,from Indiana, was found giulty•LA Council Nomination of exceeding 35 miles• per hour Freshman self-n omina t i on Lin a restricted zone and Marshalliblanks for the Liberal Arts Stu- L. Goldstein, junior in zoology ;dent Council are available in 138 and entomology from Lewistown,lSparks. was found not guilty of a stop) They will be available until sign violation, next Wednesday. Morino to For Team Vincent Marino, senior in business administration from Clearfield, will act as master of ceremonies for the football team's welcome home reception tomorrow afternoon at Recreation Hall. The exact time of the reception will be announced over radio station WMAJ after the' Men's Hat Society Association, I team is expected to return. The motorcade led by Acacia's finds out what time the team hasimodel-T-Ford will start at Alpha departed from Cleveland. !Zeta and move to Burrowes Road, Also featured at the reception;then to Curtin Road. It w,lll travel will be Frank Gullo, professor of along Curtin and down Short music, and the Men's Glee Clublidge Road to the Nittany and will lead singing. They will be;South Halls area, then go through aided by a band organized espe-' fraternity row, back up to Alpha cially for the reception. !Zeta, and finally end up at Rec- Hatmen in the motorcade will leation Hall. meet at Alpha Zeta at 3:30 p.m. 1 Loud speakers will be set up tomorrow and will not start !at Recreation Hall so that Malmo, their tour of campus until they Gullo and the Glee Club and receive a phone call from David ;members of the team who wish Williams. head manager of the Ito speak will be heard more team, telling them the time the clearly. Halt Creak Lucas. a contender for All- American honors, has been hav ing a great year. Going into today's game, he's second in the nation in total offense and 13th in passing. In five games, Lucas has gained 729 yards in 113 plays, 533 of those yards came through the air. In addition, the Riverboat has one of the top pass completion percentages in the'land He's com pleted 39 of 71 for a .549 mark. The Lions will also be counting quite a bit on the rest of their starting backfield composed of Dick Hoak and Jim Kerr at half backs and captain Pat Botula at fullback. (Continued on page six) Be MC Reception