PAGE SIX Chia petta Accepts Foreign Position Dr. Michael Chiapetta, associ ate professor of education, has re signed in order to serve as edu cational adviser to the Interna tional Cooperation Administra tion in South America. He has accepted a two-year ap pointment to participate in vari ous programs designed to im prove the instructional program in South American schools, Chiapetta spent the past year in Peru on a Fulbright Scholar ship. 1b studied the operation of the country's public school sys tem and assisted in the develop ment of teacher preparation cur ricula. Land constitutes slightly more than 29 per cent of the total sur face of the earth and water com poses the other 71 per cent, says a Twentieth Century Fund report. I. I :•:ERE!...•THE . GREATEST Here's the car that reads you. loud and clear—the new-size, you-size '6l Chev rolet. We started out by trimming the outside size a hit (to give you extra inches or clearance for parking and maneuvering) but inside we left you a- full measure of Chevy comfort. Door openings are as much as 6 inches wider to give feet, knees, and elbows the undisputed right of way. And the new easy-chair seats are as much as 14% higher—just right for seeing, just right for sitting. Once you've settled inside you'll have high and wide praises for Chevrolet's spacious new dimensions (in the Sport Coupes, for example, head room has been upped as much as 2 inches, and there's more leg room, too—front and rear). Chevy's new trunk is something else that will please you hugely—what with its deep-well shape and bumper-level loading it holds things you've never been able to get in a trunk before. Yet, generously endowed as this car is with spaciousness and clean-etched ele• gauce, it holds steadfastly to all the thrifty, dependable virtues ChevrAet buyers have come to take for granted. Your dealer's the man to see for all the details. There's never been a trunk like it before! The floor's recessed more than half a foot and the loading height is as much as 101 i inches lower. ******** * * * * * * * INTRODUCING THE '6l CHEVY BISCAYNE 6 the lowest priced fall-sized Chely with big-car comfort at small-car prices! Chevy's new '6l Biscaynes-6 or VB— you a full measure of Chevrolet quality, roominess and proved perform- ance—yet they're priced down with many cars that give you a lot less! Now you call have economy and comfort, too! See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corva : irs and the new Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet deatqet_ Photos Feature Japanese Life 1 By POLLY DRANOV - 1 photographer who had achieved L anese life... The activities of the Snow covering the tradi-1 world wide fame prior to his - I priesls recorded by the camera tional great pine trees sym bol- 1 death in 1947. lhave not changed in over 1000 , I Old and new Japan are vividly years. is of old 'Japan points out a:contrasted in the study of thel 1 The Japanese Theatre has in re little known fact of the Orien- lives of the people of that coun-,: ;try. cent years become familiar to the tal nation. 1 Skyscrapers and automobiles western world. Bischof has photo : This is one of the many faces point out the westernized city life graphed the rich costumes and of Japan illustrated in an exhib-,while the rural sections 'serve as:the splendor of this area of Jap ition of 50 photographs now ona picture of the past. Modern tech - 'anew culture again pointing out display on the third floor corridor nology seems rare in the farm of Sackett Building, areas where women are seen:the ancient traditions and rites The exhibition is now being eir_Tlowing the fields with the aid ofi still practiced by the dancers and culated throughout the United!a cow. !actors. States by the Smithsonian Insti-! One photo shows a field filled 1 The exhibition will continue tute Traveling Exhibition Service.' with umbrellas. drying in the !here until Oct. 31. It was first The photos were lent to the Insti-H sun. The manufacturer uses this ; seen at the Art Institute of Chi-. tute by Magnum Photos, Inc., of; method to dry the oil used in the ;sago. The three sections of the : New York City. 1 making of his product. ; exhibition are entitled "Ancient. The pictures are the work of 1 Religion has seen perhaps the Japan," "Modern Japan" and "The: Werner Bischof, a noted Swiss ;least change of any phase of Jap—Traditional Japanese Theatre." 1 \ 'iz:,..:-':" y. k.i ;.... , i' ..:..> ''' r.. 1. ..,, ,; + ~ '' ''".- ''':•• ~. ..,,, .., . !' ' ' '''' -%. i. 1": p I ■ :, ' 7 .:..,....::::.::::.......,..:.: k.„. ., ,, a.....:::: , , .., ~ ....... _ , THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA MIME Arc * !!- - 4 :.,...... .1 . :',, • ir.fi , i' .;..., .. , . AW:, *........,...-...:--...,..v.r , \.. - ;V. ' Ali, ::. : - •":1' r . I 0.. , :....' se. :A' :- 't" .;:,......, ... ...,.. •p ,- ..:: : ::6' 914 ,5,..,. ..... '?:",i:.; =~:~ to most e NOMAD 9.PASSENGER STATION WAGON. You have a choice of six Chevrolet wagons, each with a cave-siz,ed cargo opening nearly 5 j'eet across. . angsi ...::~~<:}..ua..:.<::k BEI. AIR 2-DOOR SEDAN, like all !61 Chevrolets; brings you Body by Fisher newness—more front leg room. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 7..1960 Prof Studies Smog Under NIH Grant New information en the nature of smog, the bane of industrial areas, may result from a basic research project - now being car ried on by a chemist here. Dr. I. C. Hisatsune, assistant professor of chemistry, has re ceived a one-year grant of $7877 from the National Institute of Health, to continue his studies of the properties of compounds formed between the elements of nitrogen and oxygen. It is known that several species of these com pounds are found in abundance in polluted air. i Wisconsin led the nation in the per capita consumption of-beer and ale in 1958 with an average 24.3 gallons. Nevada was second with 22.2 gallons and New Jersey, Mich igan and Pennsylvania third with 19.9. , ED AN—one of evies o
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers