■■Sf&s* I Sllfjf slathj 1 .--4—— J: 'I ! 11 , VOLi; 62/ Is|o:j 97 trith _ check-ins and currency exchange* Liberia Arts* Study Abroad Program as 70 stao. left Kew York for the Univer- ; by Dt. Dagobert deLevie. , titles of Strasbourg and Cologne Monday. They I 15,337 Students Register At the conclusion of yesterday's ’spring term registration period 15,337 students! had registered here, Robert G. Beroreuter, reg istrar, annojunced.\ j ' Late. registrations will be tc- . oepted today and tomorrow, Bernreuter 'said; before’ final fig > urea -can be" compiled. I Yesterday’s registration jfigure shows 535 jfewer students 1 regis ; ‘tering than for a comparable J period last) term. However, this ’’term’s figure’ is 694 above that . of spring I semester 1961 registra tion. -! ’ j I Under ‘the early registration system, students were able j to finish registering In a i much j shorter period'of time, Berrireiiter ! said; About 60. per cent of the students y/ho registered were able ,to go through! Recreation - Hall ■with no schedule change, he said, and the process took 10 minutes or less, f ; '.Hi Catherine Hersey, junior In .home economics from [fcaston. was elected national president .ol the International AssociaDon of Women .Students during the term ' break. • I ' ! Miss Hersey defeated : Sallee Shields of Western Michigan Uni /versity. at ,the organization’s re *zional ' convention held here March 18-21. j j ■ The newly (elected officers of the-organization will not officially - . take i office until. JuTy 1. The president-elect will succeed Nancy Brown :from the University of J Arizanai 1 .The purpose of LAWS is to co ' ordinate {the efforts of women’s student governments and to fur ther file education of college ' women outside the classroom. , During the two-day registration, period 3,115 students registered :at. the Commonwealth Campues, bringing the unofficial [ registra tion total for the University to 18,452. This figure is 888 fewer than at a comparable .time last term and up 825 from spring semester 1961 registration. About 600 new students were expected to be among! the stu dents registering, Bemheuter an nounced., | ■ Nearly! 450 new students have been admitted to the University Park campus for the spring Term' and about 150 to the jCommon wealth Campuses, he said. . New students on csjmpus in clude nearly ,100 freshmen, 70 admitted with advanced standing, 150 re-admitted, and 125 trans ferring from the Commonwealth campuses. | 1 The new students on:the Com monwealth Campuses include nearly 300 freshmen, l(j jWithad- Boehm ted For Strife By ANN PALMER A preliminary outline of aims and foreseeable goals far the im- Provement of higher education in 'ennsylvania was presented by Charles H. Boehm, superinten dent of the state Department of Public Instruction, March 20. Boehm’s plan called , for some $25 million In, scholarships, the creation of 24 distinguished pro fessorships and yearly state aid to libraries, museums and other facilities ox the 'state’s colleges and Universities. : - Speaking to a joint, meeting of the Advisory Committee on High er Education and the State Edu cation {Council's Committee or Higher Education, Boehm caller the measures .listed in his plar K delines for the development igber education in the Com monwealth. Tn the 1970’s and lSBo’s, out colleges and. universities must dc vastly better than today if .Penn sylvania is to remain as one o' the great industrial states.” !: University President Eric A Walker said: “Until (there ha: been, opportunity to study th« plan more fully, I hesitate U romment on its details. ;I am hap by, however, that Dr. Boehm ha: had the courage , and wisdom U propose a master plan [for higher education. Long range planning k long overdue in Pennsylvania.” According to a story , by the As sociated Press, Boemii listed thr 'ollowing as the 1 most important lima of the program: j - •Raising the level pi intellec ual resources in the Common wealth. 1 - .•Providing for an prderly ex- ifty paric-Pa.. Thursday Morning UNIVER vanced standing, 25 re-admitted and six transferring from the “Uni versity Park Campds. New students reported tel the. University Park campus Sunday and were welcomed by Dr. How ard A. Cutler, assistant to the President, Monday night. Student Ki Automobile mishaps durln term recess resulted in deat one University student an< jury for another. A third st escaped unhurt from a col with a jtruck Tuesday. John! Peterson, sophomoi chemistry from. Kane, died S day morning - about nine east of the McKean County munity when the car in « he and two companions wei < Outlines Pic Educatio pansion of educational op. ties so that all qualified yo Pennsylvania, regardless o tion in life, may secure a) post high school education. • Reducing unnecessary [dupli cation of education programs and facilities I • Developing an . ever pigher level of competency in the profes sions and technical labor force'of the Commonwealth. •Developing a more Enduring culture in Pennsylvania. I Boehm also outlined a broad ened state-supported scholarship system, proposed a " stateMnsur uice student loan program and grants totaling $400,000 per year (Continued on pope ntnd) Warm Weather Should Continue : The beautiful spring feather hat has persisted since, late last week should continue today, but ~im and cooler weather 'are in vested lot tomorrow. Considerable high thin j cloud! 11 less is expected today, but some iunshine u likely.. The ihercury ihould climb above yesterdays naximum of 63 during the early kfternoon, and a high of 68 is txpected by mid-afternoqk I Tonight should be mostly cloudy and mud. The low will be near |ft dergees. II Tomorrow should be windy and cooler with cl ; Mostly cloudy and weather is expected Sal Sunday, and snow ft possible Saturday. A BETTER PEMH STATE cloudy, lowers.. older day and tea are MARCH 29, 1962 Frondizi Army Pressure BUENOS AIRES (A 5 ) In fantry troops with machine gumj seized control of Argen tina’s Government House last night soon after President Arturo Frondizi left his office, still refusing under top military pressure to resign. The soldiers, garbed in combat fatigues, look charge without a fight as they rolled up with sub machine guns and sidearms at the Teady. The Grenadier Cavalry regi ment, traditional personal guard* for the presidency, bowed, lo the infantry and left FRONDIZI HAD driven . from his ‘"Pink House" office to his suburban home two hours earlier as swiftly moving events surged toward a climax, j A spokesman fbr the presiden j tial . press office i confirmed that I government house is “now under [the custody of the 3rd Infantry Regiment.'^ The movement of troops' into strategic positions throughout the city was regarded as the obvious led ! in Automobile Accident ? the ine skidded on a Ice patch artd i lor lett the highway. I i n . Police said Peterson’s sports car ident across U.S. Route fl. and < . smashed into a culvert and a, tree, ision throwing Peterson, William Le onei a Clarion ."State College sophomore, and Kenneth Fulmer, a high school student, from the cari ■e In >atur miles com- j PETERSON AMD LEONE were | killed instantly. Fulmer wus* re ported In critical condition at Kane Community Hospital, yes terday. Paul Mcllvaine, sophomore In agricultural and biological sci ences from Lehichton, suffered cuts of the head, -hands and back Tuesday, as well as possible in ternal injuries, when hi* motor; scobter collided with an automo-j bile at the intersection of Beaver Ave. and Locust‘Lane. State College police said Mc llvaine, who was attempting a rtuni ith in ! sta- iag schedule lb»r filed last Irid, the floor of'Sloc Hall *t» Marly amply during registration proceedings yesterday. Only those students changing fimir scbadulas had io go onto the Boot as the registration process for most students moved mom rapidly than la the past. Resists prelude to installation of a mili tary junta. THE COMMANDERS of the army, navy and air forcemancu vered rapidly after BYondui curt ly rejected their 11th hour ulti-. matum to resign voluntarily. Combat ready trclips earlier in the day had occupied strategical ly sensitive points in this tense capital and m provincial cities, including communications centers, radio stations, telephone ex changes and other nerve centers. Troops also were spotted mov ing along the dimly l lit streets of Buenos Aires, Amoving into posi tion lor the final stroke against! FYondizi. ' • At the same time Government} House fell under military control, the 3rd Cavalry Division com mander, Gen. Franglin Rawson—. a rabid anti-PeroniHt—hud set a tints limit of eight hours "for thd situation to resolve itself." Smashing election victories- by followers of exiled ex-dictator Juan D. Peron earlier this month touched off the crisis that led to the armed forces' repeated de mands for Frondi/.i’s resignation. right turn onto Beaver Ave. when the accident occurred, will be charged with traveling the-wrong way on a one way street. William McKinstry of Altoona, the driver of the <*ar with which Mcllvaine was not hurt. ALBERT C. GIERE. graduate student in physica from BoaI<(- burg, was not hurt 1 Tuesday when his car was struck from behind by a truck’ on Rdutc 32? about one-half mile east of Boafsburg, State Police said. Giere was stopped to make ia left hand turn when a tractor trailer truck hit him while at tempting to pass bn the right of his car. All group* aiilarad In ih« Spring Wo*k Carnival nuat submit a 525 tttlzanca (a* ai tha Katsal Union dark by 3 pja. tomorrow,; Paul SCrow, carnival chairman, said yaalar* day. FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers