PAGE TWO Faculty Approves New LA Curriculum By KAREN HYNECKEAL The Liberal Arts faculty has given its approval to the addition of a new curriculum, broadcasting, to the college. Fulal decision is up to the Senate committee on academic affairs At a faculty meeting on Thursday afternoon, the faculty gave its final and unanimous vote. Dennis Heads Planning Group At Ed Meeting Lawrence E. Dennis, vice' president for academic affairs, will be the chairman of the planninLt committee for the 15th annual National Confer ence on Higher Educatiil which opens tomorrow in Chi- Sevenlcon membeis of the fac ulty and administration are at tending the conference; the theme is "Platform for Higher Educa tion Guide Lines for the 130 s" The conference will conclude at noon on Wednesday. Dr, Viktor Lowenfeld, head of the Department of Art Education, will serve as a panelist in a dis cns-non of "What is the general education's responsibility for cre ativity in the language arts and humanitie," Jame , , II Coogan, director of public tam mation, will serve as winelist in an tam mation ses sion on "Image Studies of High er Educ.it ion " fietzel, a University tru,tee and vice president of the nit pin I c tin f• A`,`NOCI coon of Aniel tea. Inc and Leslie P e‘nhdl, a.,oeiate director of the of Academic Research and 5.. t cerving 3i Rai and cilium:in reqtectivelv of immion - Fig NOW TA , "ON THE BEACH" STARTS SUNDAY Feat.: 2:07, 3:58, 5:49, 7:40, 9:31 ' 3 0 . U . A t ra n ogt e h o e u r W l y i n F n u e n r n — y 1. —Doh New's ' WEE GEORDIE. ON THE BRIDAL PATH BILL. TRAVERS COLOO By TECHN , COI.O.I el A tender Juicy half-pound sirloin steak served with golden french fries, creamy cote slaw, hot rolls and butter, and a tasty beverage will make your Sunday dinner a real pleasure. Your date might really enjoy a change in dining spots . .. The curriculum in the School of Journalism has been studied care.: fully by each department, by the Course of Study Committee and; by the Administrative Committee.; The curriculum will include; many courses already required by; the School of Journalism, except' ,that the emphasis will be placed' lon the broadcasting field rather than the newspaper-magazine The one objection which some of the faculty had to the cur riculum concerned the double listing of courses: for example, Journalism 1, which will be re quired, will also be listed as Broadcasting 1. It will be the same course but will be under two different name s. Such courses as Speech 300 and Thea tre Arts 981 will follow the same procedure. The faculty decided to leave the final decision up to the Sen ate committee. In other business, Richard Ma loney, associate dean of the Col lege of the Liberal Arts, discussed the present enrollment in the college. He said that there are 789 men and 993 women enrolled in the college this spring and that 114 of these students had trans ferred from other curriculums. Maloney also said that the college has the third largest enrollment in the University and that one-third of the teach ing on campus is done in liberal arts. Leon Skinner, assistant to the dean, announced a new regula tion legarding parking tickets. This will be an accumulative plan and will continue from one school year to the next. Autopoti THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Your Special Invitation Sirloin Dinner . . . $1.50 Sunday Evening, Attloport ReJtatirant Tickets Available For Concert Tickets for the Benno Moi seiwitsch Artists Series con cert will be distributed from the Hetzel Union desk begin ning at 1 p.m. tomorrow. Non- student tickets go on sale at 9 a.m. Monday. Moiseiwitsch who is on an 8- week tour of this country will pre sent a piano concert at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Schwab Auditor ium. He recently received one of Great Britain's highest musical distinctions, a certificate of Life Membership in the Royal Phil ;harmonic Society. The Royal Phil harmonic Life Membership has been awarded only to Mendels sohn, Brahms and Tschaikowsky. Moiseiwitsch was born in Odes sa but now makes his home in England. It was during his Amer ican debut in 1919 that Rach maninoff waited to introduce him self to the young artist. Moiseiwitsch's current t our will include appearances with the National Symphony of Washing ton, the Buffalo Philharmonic, symphony orchestras of Nashville and Austin and numerous solo re citals. He received his musical train ing at the Imperial Academy of Music where he won the Rubin stein Prize when he was nine years old. He was further trained in Vienna under Theodor Lesch etizky. The pianist's recordings are now being released by EMI-Capitol. LISTEN TONIGHT at 10:05 to BLAINE HARVEY and "61100VOLOGY 54" WMAJ-1450 "Music for Your Listening Pleasure" 5 o'clock to 9 Lecture Ticket Distribution Begins Sunday Distribution of student tick-: ets will begin at 1 p.m. tomor row at the Hetzel Union desk for the C. Northcote Parkinson lecture scheduled for 8 p.m. Tuesday in Schwab Auditor ium. Non-student tickets will be' available at 9 a.m. Monday for $1.25. Parkinson's lecture, sponsored by the Lecture Series program, will explairr the now famous law of bureaucracy which he defined. The law states that "the number of subordinates in any working group increases regardless of the amount of work to he done." An Englishman, Parkinson re ceived his doctorate• in history at King's College, University of Lon don. In 1950 he was appointed to his current post, Raffles profes sor of history at the University of Malaya. DETECTIVE STORY by - Sidney Kingsley , LAST NIGHT See It at Schwab TONIGHT Tickets at HUB PHI SIGMA KAPPA WELCOMES FRESHMEN TO ITS ANNUAL "GRAVEDIGGER'S BALL" Tonight 8:30 501 S. Allen St. Careers on Overseas Frontiers Vocational seminars surveying openings overseas Home economics and agriculture Education and literature Medical missions Social Service Pastoral and evangelistic Technical and industrial • I.C.A. and business Travel and volunteer work Saturday 2:00 P. M. Eisenhower Chapel lounge Conference on CHRISTIAN FRONTIERS OVERSEAS SATURDAY, MARCH .5, 1960 Chamber Players To Give Concert The Saidenberg Chamber Play ers, who have just returned from a European concert tour, will pre sent the third concert in the Chamber Music Series at 8 p m. tomorrow in the Senior High School auditorium. This group of seven players from the Saidenberg Little Sym phony includes a pianist. two violinists, a violist, a flutist, a clarinetist, a double bass player and the director Daniel Saiden berg, who plays the cello. Tickets, which are sold for the entire series only, are available from members of the State Col lege Choral Society, at Keeler's 'Book Stole, the Harmony Shop, the Music Room and at the HUB 'desk between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. * CATHAUM Now: 2:14. 4:41, 7:08. 9:35 "Makes Peyton Place read like a book of Nursery Rhymes!" Th_e Bramble Bush EIROS:iICTUF , ,, •• ' TEGHNIGOL6R • Baud krtcm.Barbani Rash hos musso n w HILTON SPERUNG L,eoe. TON SPERLING ro/RHXIP TOREAN DneuT iv ORTIIEL FUME * NITTANY Now: Continuous from 1:15 'The Bold and the Brave' BEGINS 2 RM. SUNDAY . k A story • • ? , , z k Of people 1/ t rappe d / • - 1n... 4 ' N • Ir i ( c. ADULT , ir 4 rname los t o r ei , 4"'