SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11. 1960 Prexy I should like to welcome each of you to the University Park campus of The Pennsylvania State University. You have perhaps heard that Penn State is a large, imper sonal place. It is large. It is large enough to provide you with a competent corps of fac ulty in almost any discipline or specitalty you might wish to study. It is large enough to pro vide you with research facili ties, many of them very expen sive, in most of the areas of sci ence and scholarship of interest to man. It is large enough to provide an extra-curricular pro gram of outstanding musicians, actors, and other performers second to no other in the coun try. It is large enough to provide a sports program that includes chess as a varsity activity. It is large enough to be good. But I think you will find that it is not impersonal. Penn State is a residential campus. By this I mean that most of the students who attend the University Park campus live at or within walk ing distance of University Park, Further, most of the faculty live within the immediate vici nity. We have here, then, a com munity in which the major oc cupation perhaps the only occupation is the search for truth, the exploration of ideas, the development of knowledge and intellectual power. This common abiding interest makes for true fellowship a fellow ship that cannot be duplicated at an institution in which the only contact between students Chem Profs to Go To N.Y. Meetings Ten faculty members in the Col lege of Chemistry and Physics will participate in the 138th na tional meetings of the American Chemical Society in New York, N.Y., next week. Papers will be presented by Dr. Thomas Wartik, professor and head of the department of chem istry; Dr. Leo H. Sommer, pro fessor of chemistry; Dr. Maurice Shamma, assistant professor of chemistry; Dr. Joseph Jordan, pro fessor of chemistry; Dr. William A. Steele, assistant professor of . chemistry; Dr. Wayne Webb, pro-, fessor of physics; and Dr. Arthur, E. Woodward, associate professor, of physics. Dr. Grant W. Smith, professor ; i of chemistry, will attend a busi-, 1 ness session of the Division ofl Chemical Education, and Dr. Frederick W. Lampe, associate. professor of chemistry, will pre-1 side at a session of the Division' of Physical Chemistry. About 29.9 million tons of fish were caught by commercial fisher men of the world's 12 leading fish producing countries in 1957. WELCOME FROSH Elgin and Hamilton Watches Westclox (locks a w i l ol 218 E. College 147i1/4, Avenue JEffla STATE COLLEGE "The Shop of, Quality Watch Repairs" We come and students and faculty and students is maintained during class hours. But here I must give you a word of warning. Education is basically a lonely affair. It can be measured not by what you are taught, but only by what you learn. And learning is a tough, individual process. Oth ers cannot do it for you, nor can it be made easy. The faculty, the laboratories, the library all these exist to help you to learn, not to leach you. The value you receive from this help depends squarely on you. And I might add that you will be short-changing yourself if you limit your 'work" your reading, your studies, your discussions, and so forth to that asigned by your professors. Those assignments represent minimum requirements. You can get full value of your Penn State experience only by mak ing the fullest posible use of the facilities and resources made available to you. All of us the faculty and the "older" students alike are glad to have you here. We think you will like Penn State, and we are -anxious for you to get to kiiow us and to know Penn State as quickly as pos sible. If, at first, you are con fused or uncertain, please ask for help from any of the faculty or your upperclassmen. You will find all of us sympathetic with your problems and eager to help you solve them. Good luck and best wishes! By Dr. Eric A. Walker Retired Prof to Speak At Faculty Luncheon Chauncey P. Lang, retired pro fessor of agricultural extension, will address the first meeting of the Faculty Luncheon Club at noon Sept. 19 in the Hetzel Union building. His illustrated talk will be en titled The First Agricultural Fair in India." The Faculty Luncheon Club meets each Monday noon in the HUB and is open to all members of the faculty and staff. Great salesmanship is a lot of little sales put together. we knowiall the answers to 124 S. Allen St 404 E. College Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Pattee Gets increase In Budget The Pattee Library has received a "substantial increase" in its bud get for books and periodicals, Ralph W. McComb, University librarian announced. McComb said that the increase came after a direct request on his part to President Eric A. Walker. The money will be used for the purchase of books and peri odicals in all fields of study and also for binding, he staled. Last May a committee of the 'Liberal Arts faculty reported that the library lacked books in its collection of standard editions and 'had deficiencies in Russian musi cal and mathematics works. "The library has continued to study the report of the Liberal Arts committee and has reason to believe that it may be possible to make improvements in the corn ing year," McComb said. He slated that the graduate school appointed a committee this summer headed by Dr. Ja cob J. KaUffman, assistant pro fessor of economics, which began a study of the library's research facilities. The commit tee has not yet made its report. Speaking of library expansion McComb said, "We have a pro gram for expansion but we will not be able to carry it through until funds are made available." The program for expansion in chides an addition to the library which would add seating space for 2400 students. The addition also could pro vide for an area devoted to undergraduate students which would increase the accessibility of books by having them in open stacks. With the grant of funds, the library could add 750,000 volumes to its book capacity of .525,000 volumes, McComb said. He specu lated that the volumes might be added in gradual stages. McComb stated; however, that some of the branch college library facilities have been expanded. The Engineering library has been moved into Hammond pro viding it with the most floor area of any branch library 'on campus. College Entrance FASHIONS Every smart college girl with fashion "know. . h ow " is certain to approve our collection of cam- pus styles, designed to flatter and to treat a school girl's budget gently! Att, eizal.6l Activities Share Student Fees Four dollars and ninety cents is your "green carpet" to Penn State. This sum is marked for "undergraduate fees" and de ducted every semester from each student's tuition charges. The fee entitles you to receive the Daily Collegian and the La Vie, when that eighth se mester arrives, to have a Student Government Association and a student operated radio station. Each semester this fee is dis bursed to the various campus 'activities through the Associated 'Student Activities treasury, ac cording to requests from student organizations. - The SGA, your student gov erning body, receives 50 cents of your undergraduate fees. The representative bodies of your academic units, called college councils, receive 25 cents, as do the various living units on cam pus. Another quarter of a dollar goes toward the functioning of the Interfraternity Council, Panhel lenic Council, Association of Inde pendent Men and Leonides, which represents independent women at iPenn State. La Vie, the Penn State year book, gets the lion's share of. this $4.90 fee, or $1.75 per semester. By the time you are a senior you have painlessly paid the entire $l4 cost for your annual, Tuesday thro u g h Saturday mornings, despite deluges of snow, rain and bluebooks, the Daily Col legian is available for the taking in residence halls, at the lletzel Union desk, at the Corner Room and in the Collegian office in the basement of Carnegie. $l,lO of your fee provides this free stu dent newspaper. The Blue Band, which gives periodic free concerts in Schwab, gets 25 cents of your fee, and the Glee Club and De bate Societies share 35 cents, WDFM, the student operated FM• radio station, which broad casts from 5 p.m. to midnight, re ceives 20 cents. Now that you've seen where that $4.90 goes, you may be won dering about the remainder of your tuition fee. All of this money is combined with state and fed eral appropriations to operate the University. Each department and division in the Penn State organ ization requests the amount of !money it will need. The University budget is compiled with these requests in mind according to available funds. If is estimated that it will cost $50.000.000 to run Penn State this year. In addition to the above costs, !other charges are deducted from !your tuition fees: The Women's Student Govern ment Association and the Women's Recreation Association share $1.50, paid from each women student's tuition fee. All students pay a charge for health facilities, and ,admission to athletic events also comes out of the tuition charge. Two dollars also pays for your 'semester ticket to each artist series concert and lecture. Among !the many events slated for this year which you have already paid for are performances by Erroll ,Garner, the National Symphony Orchestra, and a dramatic presen tation of Archibald MacLeish's play, "J. 8." Journalism Profs Get AEJ Offices Three members of the School of Journalism faculty at the Uni versity were elected to ()Meet; of committees at the annual con vention of thq,, , ,,Associat ion for Education in Journalim held t here Aug. 29-Sept. 2. H. Eugene Goodwin, director of ;the School of Journalism was !elected vice president of the American Association of Schools and Department of Journalism. Dr. Roland L. Hicks, associate professor of journalism, was elect ed to the Advertising Council of AEJ and Marlowe D. Froke, as sistant profeSsor of journalism, was elected to the Radio-TV Council of AEJ. ~,~~` ~~ ~~-~, C~ PAGE THREE