PAGE FOUR Conference To Begin Thursday The third biennial Conference on Bibliography will be held Thursday through Saturday at the Nittany Lion Inn. The sessions will begin at 5 p.m. Thursday and will end on Saturday afternoon. This year's theme is "The Art of the Editor." According to Harrison T. Meserole, assistant profes sor of English and chairman of the conference committee, the conference covers all types of printing and the transmission of ideas by print. It gives par ticular reference to need for textual study and tries to es tablish a text that best repre sents the author's final intent. Modern Language Associa tion of America Center for American Editions will be the subject of three sessions, and a special session on Saturday will focus on "Editors and Publishers." Six topics to be covered are "Establishing Text", "Internal and External Evidence", "An notation and Emendation", "The Editorial Project", "From Manuscript to Printed Text" and "Textual Problems." Na tionwide scholars as well as University faculty members will speak. The conference is jointly sponsored by the department of English, Pattee, University Press, the Center for Continu ing Education and the College of the Liberal Arts Office of Research. Members Of the conference committee in addition to Mese role are Cyril F. Hager, Ralph W. McComb, Charles W. Mann, Frederick R. Matson, Henry W. Sams and T. Rowland Slin gluff. Persons professionally con cerned with research, teach ing, editing, and with libraries are invited to attend this con ference. Turfgrass Managers Cop Prizes Four students in the winter course in turfgrass management, took the top places in the first national student essay contest, sponsored by the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America. The winners were an nounced yesterday by George A. Van Horn of the Agricultural Experimental Station. Robert Hummer of RD 1, Man heim, won first place and a cash award of $2OO. Second place, Sl5O, was taken by Thomas A. Kessler of Hanover. Gerald A. Sweda of Alberta, Canada, won the SlOO third prize, and Donald J. Maske of Lockport, 111., placed fourth and won S5O. Hummer's winning essay will be published in the November- December issue of "Golf Course Reporter," an official publica tion of the Superintendents As sociation. Hummer's essay was written on the topic "The Sci ence, Art, and Business of Golf Course Maintenance." The other essays by Penn State students will be acknowledged in the same issue. The contest was open to col lege students enrolled in a two or four year curriculum and were currently majoring in turf grass management. Sixty-three students from the United States and Canada entered the contest. The entries were judged by the editor and the editorial commit tee of the "Golf Course Report er." According to Joseph M. Duich, associate professor in charge of turf training and turf research, the Golf Course Superintendents Association 9f America has pro vided 56,600 for Penn State Scholarships in turfgrass man agement. The winning students in the turfgrass management program took a course dealing with busi ness and report writing taught by Mrs. Arnold Kalin of the English Department. Frederick C. Snyder, director of agricul-J tural short courses, administers the turfgrass management win ter course. Fraternities To Hold Open House Sunday Twenty-s even fraternities will hold open houses Sunday for freshmen interested in rushing. Attendance is basically for the purpose of inspection, and freshmen may visit as many houses as they wish., There is no obligation on his part, and there is no expenditure except for refreshments. The following houses will be open from 2-5 p.m. tomorrow: Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Delta Sigma Phi, Tau Phi Delta, Theta Chi, Phi Sig ma Kappa, Phi Mu Delta, Al pha Chi Sigma, Alpha Phi Delta, Pi Lambda Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Alpha. Kappa Lambda. Omega Psi Phi, Alpha Zeta, Acacia, Zeta Psi, Triangle, Sig ma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Kappa Sigma. Kappa Sigma, Alpha Rho Chi, Delta Theta Sigma, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Chi, and Sigma Nu. Voice of America Plans U.S. Election Broadcast WASHINGTON (AP) An array of 100 Voice bf America transmitters will, broadcast the U.S. presidential election returns to listeners around the world Tuesday night when the ballot count starts until the winner is decided. the world: oct. 31 Berlin Wall Opened Again West Berliners surged into East Berlin Friday for happy reunions with relatives. It was only the second time the Communists have permitted such crossings since they built the wall three years ago. The official East German news agency ADN reported 18,100 West Berliners had passed through Communist controls by mid afternoon. On the first day of last year's Christ mas visiting period, about 4.000 West Ber liners went through the wall. Welcoming scenes Friday were not quite as dramatic as last year's but there were many long and tearful embraces. "It is a terrible shame that even a single tear has to be shed when relatives meet, many of whom live only a few mm utes apart," said a middle-aged man who was about to pass through the wall to visit his mother. "If it were not for this dis gusting thing—" he added and pointed to the gray concrete wall. Soviet Accusations Continue The fall of Nikita Khrushchev can be gauged to a new Communist picture emerg ing Friday from the veil of secrecy that surrounded his ouster. It paints him as an uncouth, bumbling, egotistical oaf. This picture was presented by a 40- page Soviet Communist party document that blames the former premier and party boss for virtually everything that went wrong in the 10 years he ran the Soviet Union. The accusations that downed Khrush chev range from unwise farm and economic policies through mistakes in allowing the 1962 Cuban missile crisis to develop, from personal rudeness to Red Chinese leaders to a vague blame for immorality in Soviet society. Johnson Discloses Programs President Johnson said Friday night "we will win this election" and "we are going to raise our sights." In a speech prepared for a big Demo cratic rally at the Chicago Stadium, John son called for "a strong Democratic Con gress to keep this country moving ahead." "We are going to see that every Ameri can child has an equal chance at the fullest education that a child can use. We have been educating most of our children, now we are going to educate those who need it most." HARE the TERPS Frosh Advanced Placements Give Credits Before Entrance It's a new way of getting , Board of Princeton, N.J. through college without really' "That number of credits for going. This fall a freshman,la single student is, of course, just out of high school, entered exceptional," said T. Sherman the University with 26 credits; Standord, associate dean of ad al•eady under his hat. missions, "but obtaining credits The student is Richard Bez- through the Advanced Place man, of Pittsburgh, a graduate; ment Program is no longer un of Peabody High School, who usual, This fall we had 122 is majoring in chemistry. His applicants for such credit; credits were acquired through when the program first started the Advanced Placement Pro-, in 1956, there were two." gram, administered by the Col lege Entranc.! Examination from the associated press He also stated that Social Security benefits will be increased and added: "We are going to add hospital and nurs ing home care—'Medicare'—to its protec tion." Commenting on the changes in the Soviet Union, he said that a crack ap peared in the Kremlin wall "the other day, and it spread to the Iron Curtain." "We cannot know what the future will bring, but we do know now that there are vast changes going on within the Corn munist Camp." Goldwater Hits Foreign Policy Sen. Barry Goldwater played peek-a boo with time yesterday in the onrushing close of his quest for the presidency. He almost met himself before he ar rived in Las Vegas, Nev., as he crisscrossed the nation's four time zones, charging Presi dent Johnson's foreign policy had left "our great alliances in shambles." Turkey is gone as an ally, Goldwater claimed, and blamed its decision to send a trade mission to Moscow on "Lyndon John son's unsteady hand on the helm of the ship of state." He ticked off other countries, including France and Britain, that no longer look wholly to this country, charging "American prestige has been sinking out of sight." This is because Johnson is "a presi dent isolated behind a wall of political am bition and behind a wall of political hench men who care nothing for the world." Glenn Receives Medical OK Marine Col. John H. Glenn, Jr. got a clean bill of health Friday from his doctors something he'd waited nine months to hear. They said he could even fly an airplane again. However, the famed former astronaut who thrilled the World as America's first orbiting spaceman still plans to retire from the Marine Corps "sometime around the first of the year." His trouble started last Feb. 26 when he fell in the bathroom of his Columbus, Ohio, apartment, struck his head against the bathtub and injured his inner ear. The fall forced him to delay his retirement from the space program and also caused him to withdraw from the U.S. Senate race in Ohio. A , f:-.,. 4, t Ice Cream Break i ' -\* s s)9: r! University Creamery ~011 Doughnuts, Milk ..... and Sandwiches too! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Penn State has been accept ing college work done in high Take an at the school since 1956, when the College Board assumed respon sibility for the program. College-Level Courses Secondary schools participate in advanced placement by of fering college-level courses in certain subjects, and the col leges and universities cooperate by agreeing to give advanced placement, credit, or both. At Penn State applicants who score three or higher on the five-point scale are eligible for advanced standing credit. The Admissions Office of the University evaluates the high school courses for advanced standing credit. Subjects cov ered by the Advanced Program are American history, biology, chemistry, English, European history, French, German, Latin, mathematics, physics, an d Spanish. Analysis of Penn State appli cants shows that the ratio of men to women is about 50-50, and that among the subject areas, English scores were the most frequently submitted. About 80 per cent of the ap plicants had been in the upper fifth of their high school class es. It was found that the ad vanced placement student earned higher average grades (2.8) at the University than did the typical Penn State student (2.5). Unfounded Criticism Stanford has reported no basis for one criticism recur rently launched at the ad vanced placement programs— that students have difficulty adjusting to the college rou tine. He noted that in admis- 'NEW COLLEGE DINER= ..I)ow l itown Between;the iolOvies '-' l , ALWAYS OPEN' NEWMAN CLUB Open Business Meeting and Informal Breakfast Sunday, Nov. 1 10 A.M. Eisenhower Chapel Large Lounge All Welcome ;4' , 44tV'' r •S', ' 151W,V4 sions studies the "typical" freshman at the University earns an average of 2.3 his first year; the freshman with advanced standing is apt to earn 2.8. Other colleges have observed a similar achieve ment by their Advanced Place ment Program students. Advanced Placement enables students to accelerate, if they wish, or to take other courses for which they would not otherwise have time. The sav ing of both time and money is obvious to both the student and the University. In terms of cold cash this means that the 511 credits ob tained from 1956-1964, by 246 (students, at $22 per credit, would have a total saving value of $11,022! During the first seven years of the program, which grew out of two experiments sup , ported by the Fund for the lAdvancement of Education, its (national growth has been rapid. The first year, 1,229 students from 104 schools took 2,199 ex aminations. In May, 1964, 28,- '874 students from 2,086 high schools took 37,829 examina tions. While only two students sub mitted test scores to the Ad missions Office in 1956, the number now seeking advanced standing and credit is rather significant: 122 in 1964, Stan ford noted. For the entire peri od of eight years, a total of 462 scores was submitted to the Admissions Office and 246 met the necessary score of three or better. - AUTO - PARTS • ACCESSORIES Western Auto 112 S. FRAZIER ST. 20 Years of Publication 'Ag Hill Breeze' Highlights Results By JOYCE McKEEVER Since the end of World War 11, the "Ag Hill Breeze", published by the students of the College of Agriculture has reported the passing scene on Ag Hill. The Breeze, now in its twen tieth year of continuous publica tion, is mimeographed twice each month and distributed to over 400 agriculture students and faculty members. Mail boxes in the Agriculture buildings are i lprovided for student distribution. Astaff of 13 writes stories and stencils for the final memeo graphed copy. Robert Andrew is Breeze editor, Mark Nestleroth and Dennis Buffington serve as associate editors, Jane Dreis bach is managing editor and Betty Poellot is production man ager. News coverage includes all activities of agriculture students, although the paper highlights results of Penn State judging teams in competition, said Nel son Gotwalt, assistant professor of agriculture and former ad visor to the newspaper. Agriculture-Oriented The paper is distinctly oriented to the activities in the College of Agriculture, Buffington noted. During the fall term the most active agriculture students are those on the judging teams in livestock, dairy, and horticul ture, he said. The Breeze reports in the winter term on the activities of agriculture clubs and guest speakers. In the spring the Breeze is active in giving cov erage to the Dairy Exposition, and the Little International Ex- ZETA BETA TAU The Emperors The Pledge Class of ACACIA presents its Night on the Nile Party featuring the Norsemen Open to all those in Egyptian Dress SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3T, 1964 hibition of livestock The Breeze has, for the past 20 years, been published in mimeographed form. "With the College of Agriculture Student Council allocating some $2OO for a year of publication," said the present advisor Elwood Mintz, "publication costs must be kept to a minimum." • College Approval The Breeze runs from two to eight pages. Staff members usually work a week in advance to have the ~paper sent to the Associate Dean of the College for approval and mimeograph ing. "The editorial policy of the paper is almost 100 per cent concerned with the College of Agriculture or the ag student," noted Gotwalt. Buffington said better functioning of the college and a better informed student were the goals of the editors. Breeze officers are located on the third floor of Armsby. University Film Scheduled Today The new film, "This Is Penn State," will be seen on Chan nel 10, WFBG-TV, Altoona, at 4:45 p.m. Sunday. Produced by the University, the film depicts the many changes that have taken place at Penn State during the past 15 years as the teaching, re search, and continuing educa tion programs keep abreast of changes that have come with new knowledge in many fields. presents