TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 21. 1961 Registration Proceeds The new system of winter ing down according to term stand- fit the 2,800 remaining students term registration is tll T saw'iSS ing successfully so far with scheduled for courses were filled there will still be those who are ifinnn ctndpnte 0 ca P acit y first, except in the not completely scheduled by over Ib,UUO students lUlly case of speech or laboratory cours- winter registration. scheduled in all courses they when the' number of students H e said that these students will requested, Warren R. Haffner, as- considerations dby ther be informed of this when they .istant registrar, said yesterday. When no vacancies were left. I 'VttTUmKey will However, he said that there are j 8 , re . < i on ' revise their schedules and fill out still approximately 2,800 students i n * * o{ ? he , sltua ‘ a new Number 2 card, he said. I who are not scheduled in one or 1 B ™j\ s < ? ed 9e * - a J ar 3e * Those who are conmletelv sched tnnrp of the courses thev reek- TOOm 01 add another section at -inusewno are completely scnea more or rne courses iney tegis , h t +j me ;< DOS sible he tiled will go through an abbre tered for at fall registration,” in . P° ssime - ne said. vj (ed registration nrocess in Rec-' coitp Of thp various means used to We received wonderful co- ldlK j n P?° CCSi >, *“ uec spite or tne various means used to ODeration fl , om ~ reation Hall and will not be re fit more student into courses. 1 0 ~ m an .uepaitmcnt . . to visit ripnartment sta heads, making our job easier/”i7- 11 5* e P ailment sta The whole operation is taking Haffner said. i llons > Haffner said. place in a "miniature Rec Hall" j{ contacting the department! Complete instructions on regis in the basement ot Carnegie 'head did not solve the problem Nation for students and faculty where 12 women are employed jf or (he student, the registration! members will be published later pulling Number 6 cards for the j WO rkers tried to schedule him in' 80 that lha procedure will be winter term, Haffner said. ;the same course at another time I clarified, he said. “We tried to give every student he said. _ ’i Haffner said he thought that all the courses he chose, giving; Work is still being done with ■ this registration process will be preference to seniors, and work- the department heeds to try to ‘continued in the spring term. Paine Named to Head Liberals By DAVE RUNKEL j named recording secretary, i cease to actively work with the Liberal party moved into a new! Sarah Ross, sophomore in me- party as it now stands," Sharp phase of its existence as a campus! teorology from Altadena, Calif., said. political party Sunday night with; was elected executive secretary, i Sharp was not a candidate for the election of an entire new slate' Party members also voted not the chairmanship, of officers and the rejection of a to merge with any other campus Campus party chairman, Dennis proposal to merge the party with political organization. The party Eisman said last night when in- University party. I had considered uniting with Uni- formed of Liberal party's action, Whiton" Paine sonhnmore ; n versity party earlier this term. “The people in Liberal party who nsvchologv from Merion Station U A lbert Sharp, predecessor to wanted to sell out their own pnn was elected chairman of the Dartv’ ;Pame as P art y chairman, said in ciples have been defeated. It be seen if Ihe new Paine caiH *‘t venresent tbo ma 1 lam pessimistic, to say the least, leadership will alter the direction foritv will in thl nartv ’’ >’ ith what the new party chair-of the party.” ‘Twill continue the original man can do ,0 preserve political Elliot Newman, University party nrincinles of T iheral navtv and partlcs 0,1 campus ' Bub 1 wlB chapman. said that he was sur attcniDt to make if a 8 greater force he is representative of the new; prised that Liberal party has de nn ” bf laf/ Type of student the party has'eided to withdraw their offer to M a raP sLr t nnilnmnr» in C n drawn this year. merge with University party, TUiion N T was ' "Of the original parly mem- “Blit,” he added, “I will respect elected vicl chahman kJdKaren fae ” "°dTsh U th °H rCmain Fay, freshman in chemistry and cept mysel{ remains and I shall ; pendent physics from Narherth, was I Faulkner fo Talk for Hiflet Dr. Joseph Faulkner, instructor in sociology, will speak on “The 1 Market Monster” at 7:15 p.m, to morrow in 119 Osmond lor the. Hillel on-campus lecture series. | MEAL TICKETS DAILY Except Friday & Saturday LISTEN TO WMAJ 10:10 nightly For Details Your Student Directory is the key to the New College Diner Lucky Number. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA Exams? Here’s the easy and, safe way to keep mentally alert: It’s the safe stay awake tablet —NoDoz®. And it’s especially helpful when you must be sharp under pressure, NoDoz helps restore mental alertness in minutes. NoDoz keeps you alert with the safe awakener found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming, NoDoz is so safe it is sold everywhere without prescription. Take it i while driving, studying, ij working, or entertaining. \^o ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF GROVE LABORATORIES Hatmen Plan Discussion Groups The Hat Society Council votedjof student - administration rela- Sunday to form discussion groups; tions. to help student-faculty relations.! Commenting upon the decision, These groups will discuss topics!, l ?' ll . l Steinhauer, president, said, such as those presented ut the Tliniufi ' ’avmg discussion meeting held last week by Robert w,th , * hc , administration G. Bernrouter, special assistant and llic st » dcn ‘ s . ~ doas t . hat to the President for student ’ ' I Steinhauer also said that he The motion resulted from a dis-; has talked to Frank J. Simos, cussion of a letter the Council 1 dean of men, and Simos is in from Corner Williams, favor of having a discussion group, junior in business administration Simes would be willing to talk from Harrisburg. In his letter, with such a group if it were con- Williams urged the Council to ducted in an orderly fashion, have as its goal the improvement Steinhauer said. IT’S LATER THAN YOU THINK! All year long you've been promising yourself to go there. Now the semester is nearly over and you stilt haven't set foot in the placo. Shame on you! But it’s not too late. Right now, this very minute, l>efore you weaken, lift up your head and forward march to the place you have hepn avoiding ever since school l>cgun, I refer, of course, to the library. Now here you are at the library. That wasn’t so had, was it? Of course not! Go inside. What do you see? A sign that says “NO SMOKING.” Go outside.. Light a Marlboro. Smoke. Go back inside. Because now you are ready. Now your trembling resolution la rigid. Now your pulsing psyche is serene. You have lieen - calmed by mild Marlboro. You have been soothed by that fine sclectrate filter, by that fine full flavor that dotes and pampers and caresses, that lifts the fallen, repairs the shattered, straight ens the bent, unravels the knotted, rights the askew, and fastens the unbuttoned. In the center of the library you see the main circulation desk. Look in the card catalogue for the number of the Iwok you want, write the number on a slip, and hand it to the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk. The efficient and obliging young lady then gives the slip to an efficient and obliging pa go Ixiy who trots briskly hack info the spicks, curls up on a limp leather encyclo|>edi.'i, and sleeps for an hour or two. Then, puffy but refreshed, he returns your slip to the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk, who tells you one of three things: a) “Your book is out.” b) “Your hook is at the bindery.” c) “Your book is on reserve.” Having learned that the circulation desk hasn't the least Intention of ever parting with a book, let us now go into the periodical room. Here we sjiend hours sifting through an im posing array of magazines—magazines from all the far corners of the earth, magazines of every nature and description—but though we search diligently and well, we cannot find Mail or Playboy. 'You tymJorMi Next let us venture into the reference room. Here in this hushed, vaulted chandler, we find the true scholars of the university—earnest, dedicated young men and women who care for only one thing in the world: the pursuit of knowledge. Let us eavesdrop for a moment on this erudite couple poring over heavy tomes at the corner table. Hush! She speaksi SHE: Wlmtelm readin’, hey? HE: The Origin of Species. You ever read it? SHE: No, hut I seen the movie. HE: Oil. SHE: You like readin’? HE: Naah. SHE: What do you like? HE: Hockey, licorice, girls, stuff like that. SHE: Me too, hey. HE: You pinned or anything? SHE: Well, sort of. I’m wearin a fellow's motorcycle emblem ... But it’s only platonic, HE: Wanna go out for a smoke? SHE: Marllroro? HE: Whatelso? And as our learned friends take their leave, let us too wend our way homeward—a trifle weary, perhaps, but enlightened and renewed and better citizens for having spent these happy hours hi the library, Aloha, library, alohat © KMI Hu Btralmu The maker* of Marlboro, who sponeor thte column, could write volume # about another one of their line product * — the unliltered king-size Philip Morris Commander—but toe'll only tell you thiol Take a leaf from our booh. Enjoy m ; Commander today. OaCanftts MKMman ithor of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek", “ The Many Loves of Dobie (HUis”, etc.) fj 4yj * O PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers