Weather Forecastt | { Partly Cloudy, f Mild I j VOL. 61. No. 43 Upset-Minded Crusaders Bid for sth Straight Win Against Nittanies Today BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 11—Penn State can clinch its 22nd consecutive winning season tomorrow by beating Holy Cross in nearby Worcester, but Dr. Eddie Anderson and his Cru saders have their own streak to protect. The kickoff is set for 1:30 p.m. and the Crusaders will be Third Party To Divide Organization Liberal party has decided to split its organization and let Its executive committee have complete charge of acquiring a charter, while the rest of the membership will work toward the election of its "endorsees,” Richard Snyder, party chairman, said last night. The proposed third party had its charter application rejected Tuesday when the Senate Com mittee on Student Affairs refused to accept what they termed mem-i bership restrictions in the group’s constitution. The constitution cailed for a screening of all pro posed members before they could be accepted into the party. Snyder said the party would not change its constitution until it found out exactly what the; committee required of them for a! charter. The party does not want to strike its membership clause, Snyder said, adding that "it is the only thing that sets us apart, from the other parties.” | There seemed to be dissension in the party as to how its en dorsed members are going to han dle their campaigns. According to Snyder, the endorsees (since they do not have a charter, Liberals endorsed rather than nominated candidates) will be supported by the parly. However, according to Barry Flasliman, party vice chairman, each endorsee will act as an in dividual independent candidate, “since we actually have no party to endorse with.” Educational Research Basic Courses Studied By MEG TEICHHOLTZ Third in a Series A young educational re search project with its base of operations appropriately in a nursery may lead to findings which could influence the ed ucation of college age students. Under stark, fluorescent lights of the nursery in the new home l economics building a team of re search assistants are at work to determine the best method of teaching the basic elements of English and mathematics to col lege students who are deficient in these subject areas. They are adapting the rudi ments of these subjects to a log ical series of learning steps, which they oall programmed learning. The result of this Sty* laity By SANDY PADWE Sports Editor looking for their fifth straight win before a full house of home coming fans at Fitton Field. At the beginning of the sea son most fans around here would have given you even odds that Holy Cross would head into the Penn State game with an 0-7 record instead of 4-3. Hit hard by graduation, the Cru saders faced the 1960 campaign I with plenty of sophomores and a handful of experienced seniors. So when they lost their opener; to Harvard, 13-6, nobody was sur prised. The week after, Boston University handed Holy Cross a 20-14 licking. Then it was Syracuse’s turn and all New England was ready for a massacre but it never came, and the Orange were hard-pressed to win, 15-6. i Since then Holy Cross has banded together for wins over iDartmouth, Columbia, Marquette land Dayton and hopes are high for lan upset over Penn State, con-; isidered by many tq.be the most i underrated team in the East. j State has a 4-3 record this year with one game—against Pitt next weekend—remaining, The Lions opened the season fay beating Boston U, 20-0 but the next week they lost to sec ond-ranked Missouri, 21-8. They turned in their most im pressive performance against Ar my the following week at West Point and came home with a 27- 16 win. j The Syracuse game Oct. 15, was a thriller with the Lions losing, 21-15, when the clock ran out with the ball on the Orange four. After that Rip Engle’s Nit tanies lost to Illinois, 10-8, then beat West Virginia, 34-13, and Maryland, 28-9.. If Holy Cross has any hope of winning tomorrow, the Cru saders will have to stop Penn State's hard-charging line and backfield. State isn’t a fancy team. The Lions just stick to plain, hard nosed football, taught in the steel and coal towns around the state. Galen Hall and Dick Hoak will (Continued on page six) adaption is learning of basic elements in small “doses.'' Programmed learning may be adapted to any one of a multi tude of teaching machines, to a programmed book or to closed cir cuit television. The researchers are trying to determine which method is most effective. If closed circuit TV proves the most efficient for teaching basic courses to those who are not prepared for advanced | work, and the researchers seem to think that it will, the viewer would be in for a shock. He would not see a face on the screen, but would be taught with only the elements of print, pictures, graphics and sound united in the programmed ap proach. This might be combined with periodic conferences be tween the student and an in structor so that his individual progress could be determined. The advantages of programmed STATE COLLEGE. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 12. 1960 Junta Asian SAIGON, South Viet Nam (/P) A military revolt, avowedly aimed to depose a family dictatorship and strengthen the fight against Communist infiltration, toppled pro-Western President Ngo Dinh Diem yesterday. A rebel junta headed by para-troop Col. Nguyen Chanh Thi claimed cohtrol of South Viet Nam’s government after a pre-dawn uprising in whic’ —-Collegian Photo by Kith Bower STUDY IN ALUMINUM—Jan Peter Stern, sculptor of the exhi bition to be shown in the HUB, readies one of his works for its initial showing at the University, The exhibition will open formal ly with a reception for the sculptor in the main lounge of the HUB at 3 p.m. tomorrow. SG4 Hears Report— HUB Lot Half Used In the evening hours between 6 and .11, the Hetzel Union parking lot is seldom even half full, Richard Kelley, chairman of the Traffic Code Investigation Committee, told SGA Assembly Thursday night. [learning, as enumerated by the |researchers are: ! •The student is more able to imove at his own rate as he learns 'the correctness of his responses |to programmed questions imme jdiately. • The material is covered in 'short sequential steps going from I the simple to the complex. | «The instructor has complete 1 information on the progress a student is making through the students’ responses to each pro grammed question. • The student is actively parti cipating and making overt re sponses to the programmed ques tions. With programmed learning the student responds to each question asked on the material taught, something not possible in the typical classroom situation. He learns immediately the correct ness of his response and he must go back and re-learn what he has answered incorrectly. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Kelley’s committee has been surveying the lot during these hours as part of a large scale investigation of parking problems. Each night members of the committee count the cars in the lot, ask the owners their des tination and the number p£ times per week that they use the lot. Four other lots including the lot behind Osmond and the lots near the Pollock Halls are also being surveyed. The committee, Kelley said, hopes to gather spe cific data in order to prove that the HUB lot could feasibly be re opened for students during the evening hours. Kelley's committee is inves tigating the other lots so that it can determine if redirection of the people now using the HUB lot is possible. “We’ve been working on this project for about a week but do not feel that we have sufficient data as yet,” Kelley told Assem bly Overthrows Government In other business. Assembly heard a report from Robert Harrison, chairman of SGA Rules Committee, concerning the impeachment of assembly men who have missed more than three meetings during a semester. Harrison said that the SGA (Continued on page eight) Hit I -See Page 4 j tIMIMII MIU«f ••(•••*•«••»*•• *tM ttiMf h between 20 and 30 persons wore killed and many were in jured. The junta proclaimed that it is backed'by all the armed forces, bulk of which is the 120,000-man army, and appealed to the people to accept the situation calmly. Five battalions perhaps 3000 men staged the uprising that made South Viet Nam the third Asian ally and beneficiary of (lie United Slates to have its govern ment changed violently this year. The others are South Korea which maintains its old ties with the West, and the Kingdom of Laos, which has turned neutralist. U.S. aid has poured to South Viet Nam at the rate of about $250 million a year. Four elite security battalions and a U.S.-trained marine bat talion struck swiftly in the darkness at 3 a.m. They seized government buildings, the Na tional Assembly and the air port, and then moved in on the cream and white presidential palace in the heart of Saigon. About 400 parachute troopers launched that attack. The palace's- 200 white-uni formed guards fought fiercely, but were overcome in a six-hour bat tle. | Armored units rumbled into the jcapital from Mytho. 75 miles to the south, in answer to a call from the president. Instead of ral lying to Diem, however, they joined the rebels. - Fires burned in the heart of the city. Gunshots awakened the people and thousands swarmed into the streets to watch. A Vietnamese air force plane scattered leaflets urging the rebels to give up their re volt. Paratroopers armed with gren ades and submachine guns took over direction of traffic after the battle ebbed. No casualties were reported among the several thousand Americans living here ns military or civilian advisers to this nation of 12 million. Art Exhibition To Feature Stern's Works A one-man sculpture exhibition of Jan Peter Stern’s sculpture arid photographic studies wilt formal ly open with a public reception for the sculptor at 3 p.m. tomor row in the main lounge of the Hctzel Union Building. Stern will show sculpture done iin aluminum, stainless steel and one piece in paper textile cones. A graduate of Syracuse Univer sity and the New School for So cial Research in New York, the sculptor has had one-man show ings at the Katonal Gallery in West Chester, N.Y., and at the Ba rone Gallery in New York City. Stern recently participated in a group showing at New York Uni versity. The exhibition which will be at the HUB gallery until Nov. 28 will feature pliable wind shapes, sea shapes, hovering, and geo metric forms. Stern who sculpts functional ornamentation for public and pri vate buildings said the pieces in the collection were all done for personal enjoyment and not for commissions. Stern added that his sculpture grows from a unity of material rather than a set plan decided upon before working with the material. Step Towctrd Improvement FIVE CENTS