FRIDAY. MAY 20.196 Changes May Be Made In Compulsory ROTC 5 Thespians WiII Visit ft, KAREN HTNECKEAL iNew York ' Lest of a series Five members of the Thes- The change from compulsory to voluntary ROTC does ;plan Club have been chosen to not seem to be immediately forthcoming but there will be a 'make a trip to New York City few changes in the individual programs. !the weekend of June 4,5, and The Air Force, for instance ,will require only two hours IS. to see six musicals that are ®f military class per week for senior cadets instead of the currently showing there. .usual five. This change will go Those chosen for the trip are into effect in September. !Rosalie Samley, who has done , One of these two hours will be choreography direction Ag Society k for Thes ispent in leadership lab white the wan shows; Walter Caplan, sen t ether will be in class. The remain- ior in business administration To Sponsor , ing three hours will be devoted from Jeanette; and Theodore .to an academic subject. This will Pauloski, president ot the Thes include one semester of Geog- pian Club. Tractor Race raphy 460 and a semester of either . , Edward Rolfs who has had sev-; !international Understanding 300 i eral leading roles in Thespian Be on the lookout today for or Political Science 14.. !productions, and Deer! Eayre.l , AFROTC has also submitted a lighting director for most of thel a tractor driven by a girl on ( t pla.n to the University Senate,Thespian shows. were also se-I becomeh effective 1 s e looted to go to New York campus_ She is a "running"wich will l ,Septernber, 1961, it approved.' The shows which the Thespians advertisement for tom orrows;This plan concerns the freshmen!ase planning to see are "Gypsy." tractor drivingland sophomores and will stipulatel"West Side Story," "Green Wil contest. -! !that only the second and third!low," "Music Man." "Leave It tol The University's student branch'semestere be devoted to air sci-SJanes" and "Little Mary Sun of the American Society of Agri- once while the first and feurthlshine." cultural Engineers is sponseringlsemesters be spent taking aca-' The group will be accompanied the contest at 1 p.m. tomorrow inldeinic courses. However. the one-lbY Ray T. Fortunate. advisor to the Forestry parking lot. (hour-per-week leadership 1 a btlie Thespian. Club, and his wife. The contest is judged on the will be required for all four se-! Fortunate said that he hopes ability to maneuver tractors and:inesters. ,that all of the plans for the trip spreaders through the provided! The Department of the Army go through. He said that Actors! courses. Each contestant will; announced that no major Equity had threateeed to go onl choose his own tractor from al changes will be made in basic strike the last week of May and! wide selection, hook it to the; ROTC. In the advanced pro- might cause all of the shows to! spreader and drive both through! gram. however. SO of the re• be closed , a series of obstacle courses. I quired hours will be taken in ' The five students were selected' A trophy will be awarded to academic courses- Om, 3-credit 'by the members of the club on; the person with the least num-I course (45 hours), in the fifth the basis of work they have done! her of errors. I and eighth 'semesters will tour on ! previous Thespian shows, I Anyone is eligible to enter, co-! er this change. ' Jordan Receives Grunt gds included. 4 fee of 50 cents: The Navy has no future changes, 1 will be accepted at the Hetzel planned. But this past fall, the! An Atomic Energy Commis— Union desk until May 20. Late!substitution of Psychology 2 for lion grant of 519.826 to the De-I entries may register at the con-'Naval Science 201 went into effect ! partment of Chemistry will sup-' test. I These changes within the three, port research directed by Dr. University officials said thatidepartments do not chang e, how- ' Joseph Jordan, associate profes parking area 2, adjacent to For-lever, the problem of compulsory ser of chemistry, on En thalpy intrations in Molten Salts. entry, will be closed temorrowversus voluntary ROTC. And it is The one-year grant is a con during the event, rather safe to predict that the' t intition_ of _earlier_ support. ,problem will crop up again soon.: Rally to Feature Talk either on "this campus or else- By Bishop of Hanover \ where. As this series ends, for ex- Bishop Johannes Lilje, bishop' ample. the third student demon of Hanover in West ' Germany' stration at Lehigh against corn will speak on "The Church Be-1 pulsar? ROTC is in progress. tween East and West" at the Ecu-I Here, however, the issue is at a menical Rally to be held 3 p.m ? low peak although Robert Har- Sunday in Schwab auditorium. ;risen, chairman of SGA Rules Bishop Ldje is presently Ares- Committee, said recently that a ident of the United Lutheran:summer investigation of the ROTC Church of Germany. He is also a;prograrn is being planned. member of the Central Commit- I As a final note ... a recent poll tee in the World Council of'of over 200 Army and Air Force Churches. cadets at the University gave this result: Over 44 per cent of those !interviewed said they would take ROTC even if it were not required. CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS 50c BUYS 17 WORDS BETTE7EADING 1.01111? COST QUALITY PAPERBACKS MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN TOWN - PRICED slim RESPECT TO YOUR POCKET KEELER'S THE UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE 8:45 A,M. to 9 P.M., Monday 8:45 A.M. lo 5;30 P.M, Tuesday Hinz Saisurday AD 7-2112 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA LA GALLERIA ACCUSED OF SERVING NARCOTICS Appearing in Wednesday's ad for LA GALLERIA the word "hashish," meaning a hernplike plant chewed or smoked in the Orient to promote a nar cotic effect. We do not serve narcotics, although our steaks have been said to have a some what narcotic-like effect on people. The people I mean are the 25 or 30 odd persons who come to LA GALLERIA 3 to 7 times a week and order a steak dinner at $1.19. But, are these people addicts or merely sharp people who know a good deal and like to eat in candle lit atmospheres. Why don't you take a puff, I mean, take a bite of a $1.19 steak at LA GALLERIA. just came in from Philadelphia today. We're Sure You'll love tt STEAKS $ll9 A new shipment of KOSHER DELICATESSEN MEATS Sally Dames Looks at • --..Y.N.,4*•;1 4 . . . ~- . ...... ~- .. :......: ' . . A- •••:::..,'.... •••:::..,'.... . . ..:',...."•.',. ,•,...,..._ •..,.•,...._ ..., .... ... .... . .._ .. li U mst ..•,•: ...- ...,.:.- .-- ......:, ...-... , he , - ,,..- 4 11-c . r..- ..! 1 f, '...w -_';1'........ , ::: . '... '' . ~- ' - NATIONAL PURPOSE From the Penn State world of 8 &clocks, chapter meetings and HUB hours the class of 1960 will graduate shortly into the larger world presently one of tenseness and uncer tainty. As college students soon to fill Uncle Sam's shoes, our future is directly affected by the decisions on today's crises. Beginning with the May 23 issue and running for five weeks, Life will present a time ly and crucial series on Amer ican national purpose. Emi nent Americans such as Adlai Stevenson, Billy Graham and Walter Lippman will discuss where America has been, our present status and, more im portantly, where we are going. William Faulkner recognized our lack of direction and asked, "What has happened to the American dream? We dozed, slept and it abandoned us." The spy flight of Francis Powers and the collapse of the summit have served to alert a yawning U S. to the im portance of our strategic po sition in world affairs. To make our move, however, we must re-examine our long-range di rection and goals. While we vacation with George Gohel, the Pirates and Maverick, we often don't pause long enough to consider where we as individuals are headed either earnpus-wise or ear eer-wise let alone the divee tion of the nation. Resulting from concern over this mislaid identity, the Pres ident organized a Commission on National Goals "to develop a broad outline of national ob jectives and programs for the next decade or longer." But the nation's leaders cannot plan alone. They need the help of every voter and the thought ful concern of near-future vot ers—us. Where do we start? Perhaps the Preamble to the Constitution serves as a back drop or definition of national purpose but it is general and cannot stand alone. A back drop needs plops the speci fics—concern over the coming election and intergration issues, a focus on internationalism and how America is currently viewed by the rest of the world. A few months ag,O Walter Lippman commented that the present mood of America is defensive and "we talk about ourselves as if we were a com pleted society, one which has achieved its puipose and has no further business to trans- In the oast America 1.v.1s a symbol to others of a country with national purpose. We boasted a smiling, hearty-hand• shaking confidence in our un limited potential. To illustrate, 100 years ago a French visitor to the U.S. praised our great youthful vitality and wondered what our "old age" could hold. Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan readily replied, "Sir, it will have no old age." How many of us would give the same an swer as quickly today? . Life's chief editorial writer, John. Jessup, feels that there is currently among Americans "a real vacuum in the national wilL" Could our immediate national purpose then be to fill that vacuum? Life hopes this new series will. "stimulate a fruitful na tional debate" and help to pre serve our national identity among nations and present a unified American pui pose be fore the rest of the world. --31- PAGE FIV
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers