PAGE FOUR Faculty To Discuss KETCH University faculty and their guests will have an opportunity to learn more about Project Ketch at the first Spring Term meeting of the Faculty Lunch eon Club Monday. Project Ketch is the contro versial proposal for a nuclear underground explosion to pro duce a gas storage area near Renova in Centre County. The speaker will be William C. Underwood, State Informa tion Coordinator for Project Ketch who is a business ser vices representative for the Pennsylvania Department of Commerce. Underwood works with the Pennsylvania Advisory Committee on Atomic Energy Development and Radiation Ad visory Committee on Atomic Energy Development and Ra diation Control and is Staff As sistant for the Governor's Sci ence Advisory Committee. A 1965 gradaute of the Uni versity, he also is state co ordinator for the Rail Dem onstration Program between Harrisburg and Philadelphia. The ta 1 k by Underwood, which will be followed by a question period, is planned to give faculty basic information about Project Ketch before the University meeting on the sub ject April 17. Luncheor c 1 • b meetings, open to all faculty, are held weekly at 12:15 p.m. in Room A of the HUB. Th.: meetings begin at 1:30 p.m. Cafeteria luncheon service in the Yaple Room, Human De velopment Building, will re sume Monday - for the Spring Term, Law•-ence A. Olivia, in structor in Hotel and Institu tion Administration, announced yesterday. , enovated Jawbone 0 •ens By BARBARA BLOM Collegian Staff Writer The Jawbone Coffee House has opened its doors after its Spring housecleaning. The coffee house has expanded its facilities to include a new sound system and a study room equipped with a library. The Jawbone, at 415 E. Foster Avenue, will be open from 9 to 5 p.m. every day for study and free coffee. On weekends, from 8 to 1 . a.m., patrons are treated without cover charge to a wide variety of entertainment. A demonstration of this is this coming weekend's schedule. The performers this Friday night will be the New Old Time Wooly Thumpers, a jug band, and on Saturday, a barber shop quartet, The Troublemakers will be featured. No one need go hungry during the floor show while the "jawburgers" are sizzling on the grill and pastries and various .kinds of coffee are ready to be served from the kitchen. The only "coffee house" in State College, the Jawbone is designed to serve the students and faculty of the University and the State College Students Won't Get Refunds , Students employed by the ees are considered Common- less than $6OO and taxes were University are not entitled' to wealth employees. As such, withheld from wages by their refunds of social c •urity taxes they are not exempt from social employers, they must file a re withheld from their wages, ac- security tax." turn to obtain refund of the cording to H. Alan Long, Dis- Circular "E," the Employer's tax withheld. trict Director of Internal Rev- Tax Guide, indicates that Unmarried students who earn enue for Western Pennsylvania. wages paid to students working less than $9OO will not owe any Section 218 of the Social Se- for a college or university are . Federal income tax. They are curity Act provides that em- exempt from social security entitled to claim the usual $6OO tax, Students of the University ployees of State governments personal exception, plus a $3OO however, are not exemptedun may obtain coverage throughminimum standard deduction .ww0.4.041bd0t...04.04 agreements made betw e e n der this provision because of the existing agreement. Claims!' States and the Secretary of for refund governing social se-I Health, Education, and Wel- fare. Tax paymvnts under the curity taxes withheld from stu agreement are made by the dents' wages should therefore states directly to that Depart- no•- • 1-c flec " meat. Students who worked part time or during the summer, "The Common wea 1 t h of may have a refund coming on Pennsylvania entered into such their 1967 Federal income tax an agreement," Long said, returns, Lang said. "and since the Pennsylvania Students are required to file State University is one of its a tax return if they earned instrumentalities, its employ- $6OO or - more. If they earned • JTVO:.n. UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS mn.. 9 .l9&compleiion of al !tail l yearof college ) GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATION OP PRIVATE CAMPS • .. • . . comprising 350 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brother-Sister ~' and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Mid- ' die Atlantic States and Canada. ~ ". INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concerning summer employment as Head ' ;,1 Counselors, Group Leaders, Specialties, General Counselors. ... Write, Phone, or Call in Person Association of Private Camps Dept. C , Maxwell M. Al exan d er, Executive D i rector r‘i :V.5.5 West 42nd Street, .OX 5.2656, New York 36, N. Y. Calle • ian Notes Service, open to the public, is available Mondays through Fridays from noon until p.m., a change from the previops 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m..sched ule. The food is prepared and counters are manned by stu dents in food service and hous ing at the College of Human De velopment. Menu innovations have been planned in keeping with the Spring season, Olivia said. MM:I Albert Gerard, international authority on African literature, will speak hete Wednesday on "Mannerism to Bar oqu e: Shakespeare's "Troilus an d Cressida' and Lope de Vega's, Puenteovej un a. " The program, sponsored 'by th•' Committee on Comparative Literature, is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Assembly Room of tt Hetzel Union Building on Campus. Agronoiiy Graduate S. Franklin Bonner, who re ceived his bachelor of science degree in agronomy from the University in 1916, will address students at 7:30 p.m. Thurs day in 26 Mineral Sciences auditorium, in Deike. The meet ing will be open to the public. ' 3onner's topic will be "The Role of Maps and Other Data in the Construction of a Town or Township Master Plan." * * D. S. Kemp, assistant profes sor of chemistry at the Massa chusetts Institute of Technol ogy, will discuss "Aspects of Peptide Synthesis" at 12:45 p.m. Thursday in 310 Whitmore Laboratory. The program will open the University's weekly Spring Term Chemistry Col- Sound System, Library, Study Room Added community. It is a non-profit operation, directed by Edward R. Widmer, and managed by the Lutheran Foundation, which sponsors the Luth eran Student Association. An appointed student staff and other volun 7 teers assist Widmer and,help in such renovations as those of Spring break which included the new library in the lowet level of the house. Katherine Bell of Nittany News Bookshop donated $2OO and some, books to the project. This term 'the Wednesday night Student- Faculty Dialogue will be continued, beginning next week. The dialogue is an effort to bring the students together with a member of the faculty outside of the classroom for inforrhal discussion— usually of a current controversial issue. "Focus '6B" will also continue this term. This is the Thursday evening gathering of students who have an opportunity to release ten sion by airing their biases and widening their per spective on particular problems. Last term "Focus '6B" was the scene of heated conversation on such Gs.; loquium prograr. A new annual series, The Corn Products Lectures in Ad vanced Chemistry, will open Friday, with F. G. A. Stone, professor of inorganic chem istry at the University of Bristol, England, introducing a unit on the chemistry of metal carbonyls and rclated com pounds at' 12:45 p.m. in 310 Whitmore Laborr.tory. , • rive distinguished visiting chemists, each presenting six addresses, will conduct the yearly Spring ..Term series. Graduate-level lectures in in organic chemistry, the topic field for 1968, are scheduled every Mqnday, Wednesday and Friday through Ji ne 7. They are o - ien to all interested per sons. Other inorganic chemists par ticipating in this year's lecture series are M. F. Hawthorne, University of California at Riverside; L. F. Dahl. Univer sity of Wisconsin; H. B."Grcy, California Institute of Technol ogy; and Fred Basol, North western University. The Surgeon General of : the U.S. Public Health Service; Dr. William H. Stewart, will be the main speaker at the College of Medicine Opening Convocation at the University's Milton S. Hershey Medical Center on Tuesday, April 30. In announcing the appear ance, Dr. George T. 'Harrell, dean and director at Hershey, said. "IV? are pleased that such a distinguished authority on health problerls and the de livery , of medical care will speak at the ,College of Medi cine Opening Convocation, the first presentation of the Col- Student Staff 1967 Taxes Near Presenting the creative world of . . . STAN KENTON MID HIS ORCHESTRA Saturday, April 20th, 1968, 8:30 p.m. • Susquehanna University Selinsgrove, 'Penna. Reserved Seats—s2.so Write "Stan Kenton", Box 316, S. U. Selinsgrove, Pa. Encloie remittance and self-addressed stamped envelOpe THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, f,ENNSYLVANNA lege aimed beyoiid the boun daries of the campus." The two-day invocation will mark the formal opming of the Penn State College, of Medicine, which enrolled its first students lasl, fall. Dedication .., the Cen ter will be ".el.l in 1970 after the entire complex is complete. "Hybridization .k.;xperiments on Mannalian Cells" is the title of a .talk 'to be given by Miss Wiry Weiss at 4 p.m. today in 105 Walker Laborate y. Miss Weiss is' a member of the De partment of Embryology at the Carnegie Institute of Washing ton in Baltimore Maryland. A recruiting officer will be at the University next Wednesday to interview students interested -in full-time career rositions in Washington, D.C., the U.S. Of fice of Education has an nounced. Students who expect to re ceive' a bachelor's, master's, or doctor's degree by July of this year ha've been invited to sign up for an interview ap pointment at the University Placement Service. 'Peter A. Firmin, dean of the Tulane University Graduate School of Business Administra tion, will visit •the University next Monday and Tuesday for 'a lecture. and discussion on his work in, accounting and man agement information systems. The program will be spon sored by the Department of Ac counting and Quantitative Busi ness Analysis, and the Re search Committee of the Col lege of Business Administra tion, under a grant by Price Waterhouse & Company. topics as "Post Modern Man—the relationship of the individual and personal conscience to society," and "The Haves and Have Nots—a need for com passion." - Tonight all , those interested are invited to the first Lenten Peace Dinner of the term to be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. where participants will be served a meal of rice, tea and serious thought. In three weeks, the Image Series, from the Ecumenical Institute in Chicago, previously spon sored by the Wesley Foundation, will begin on Tuesday nights. To complete this overflowing calendar of ac tivities the Jawbone is going to publish a literary magazine this term, edited by Robert A. Boon (Ist-liberal arts-Aliquippa). John E. Haag, assist ant professor of English, is the staff adviser. The Jawbone also provides a counseling service to students of the University. Organizations and special groups are invited, without charge, to uti lize the coffee house facilities when they are not in use. Students are entitled to claim their own personal exception when filing a tax return, Long said. Parents who furnish more than one-half the cost of sup port of their child who is a full time student may also claim him as an exemption on their tax return, unless the child is mzrried and is filing a joint re turn with his or her spouse. eIBERT F. OSBORN Elected to Academy DR. WILLIAM STEWART To Speak at Hershey Lenten Dinner t`',: 4i t , '.:,..., .. , *i, , k •-.....,,...,;,.:;• s \ • ',, ' s' ~ ' ••". : :... . . • ' , ..... •. . • ~ , . rt,', '':';'..:.lll‘ • - • ".-' -, i.. 7; . ; ''.?.,',. • •-,k••+?(•••,' , e, ‘ '.. '. •'•'." ' 1 ,-.::.5,,05. ''.'''t . :.'..... • i iIA '":‘‘.. .. '1..% '' P';.ttil:::: i!i)•:,:,,,•,,,-1., ... .-,..1.iN'i...,...r. , •• .....;:,?.;•;P-.,".: ~ 04>., < •. ,•-• • ~ .:. # i;'.;•, . ...‘ii'Vi'N,..' .„.- Playtex•invents the first-day tampon- (We took the inside out • to show you how different it is.) Outside: it's softer and silky (not cardboardy). Inside: it's so extra absorbent... it even protects on your first day. Your worst day! In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind... the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent. Actually 45 % more absorbent on the average than the leading regular tampon. ,Because it's different. Actually adjusts to you. It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect every inside inch of you. So the chance of a mishap is almost zero! Try it fast. ,J 1 • ri! Why live in the past? • 6 4 playk YAF Members Explore Official Washington The 15 Penn State students who filed into Sen. Robert Kennedy's Washington of fice last week were not Bobby fans. "We just stopped by to measure the office for a demonstration," Douglas Cooper said. The students were members of Young Americans for Freedom,' the campus con servative organization, touring the Capital, Donald Ernsberger, : who organized the "trip," said that he 'was disappointed to learn that Kennedy was away. According to the sec retary, he was looking after important busi ness on the Senate Indian Affairs Sub-com mittee in California and the other, primary states, The YAF trip lasted only two days, but according to one footsore member, the agenda was planned by someone who consider6d sore feet a communist plot, not likely to be found among YAFers. Most of the Congressmen took time to discuss issues with the group, and explain their positions on various issues. Conservative Confab The YAFers spoke to a number of con servatives, Representative John Ashbrook (R-Ohio) believed that Rockefeller is still a potent force, that he is playing with dis avowals only to escape the need to show voter strength in the primaries. The group quizzed Ashbrook, as they did most of the Congressmen, on racial integration, on the war, on the coming election, Nobody even speculated on the possibility of Johnson withdrawing, San, Hugh Scott (It-Pa,), was unable to YAF To Offer Speaker Ifonika Fliclr, formerly a citi- will be spon. ored by the Young some American students studs'- zen of c zec h os i oi Ai n, w ill dm. Americans for Freedom. ing in Poland have been expel cuss the "failure of Comrnu. Douglas Cooper, president of led on the charge that they took nism to capttit.e the interest and YAF said "Miss Flidr's topic Part in the riots. is' ' . particular. • role ant in view Miss Flidr, ho is 25, taught imagination of younti people in of recent student demonstra- Czech and Russian in high Communist-run countries" at tions in Polan:I and Czechoslo- school in -Czechoslovakia until 2:30 p,m,, Sunday in the fietzel vakia against government con- her defection in January, 1965. sorship of literary magazines." She is current:y taking courses Union These demonstrations have at a college in New York •City Room, resulted in the resignation of and hopes to qualify for a Miss Fl:dr, who has spoken the president and party chair- teaching position in this coun at several college campuses, man of Czechoslovakia. Also, try. Passover Meals Times Registration will be held to day and tomorrow for Pass over me-ls. The Department of Housing and Food Services, working with the Office of Religious Af fairs, said yesterday that stu dents can pay the $7 registra tion fee in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. All meals will be served in Atherton Hall. Luncheon meals will be available April 13 through April 20; dinners will be served April 14 through April 19. Sedar meals will not be of fered. Lunches will be served from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dinners will be served from 4:45 to 6 p.m. DAILY COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 10:30 A.M. Day Before Publicafior, ....,„ A • ~ .• ~.4 <K'i:....,..ti e ti / • „.,.... • 3 , , -,,,. , -....,.., oa ' •••.i. , ;;‘......,..,.. . .:,,,,, • •,(..* ..K~~pbMituwltl~W ^'~K~vMo2i~WM~' MONEY: THE STORY OF AN ENGINEER We all know, of course, that in this age of technology every engineering senior is receiving fabulous offers of employment, but do we realize just how fabulous these offers are? Do we comprehend just how keenly industry is competing? To illustrate, let me cite the true and typi cal case of E. Pluribus Ewbank, a true and typical senior. One day last week while strolling across the M.I.T. campus, E. Pluribus was hailed by a portly,and prosper ous man who sat in a yellow convertible studded with precious gem stones. "Hello," said the portly and pros perous man, "I am Portly Prosperous, president of American Xerographic Data Processing and Birth Con.: trol, Incorporated. Are you a senior?" "Yes, sir," said E. Pluribus. "Do you like this car?" said Portly. "Yes, sir," said . E. Pluribus. • "It's yours," said-Portly. _ "Thanks, hey," said:E. Pluribu,s. "Do you like Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades?* said Portly. "What clean living, clean shayen American does not?" said E. Pluribus. • "Here is a pack," said Portly. "And a new pack will be delivered to you every twelve ininutes as long as you live." "Thanks, hey," - said E. Pluribus. "Would your wife like a mink coat?" said Portly. "I feel sure she would," said E. Pluribus, "but I am not married." "Do you want to be?" said Portly. \"What clean living, clean shaven American does not r said E. Pluribus. Portly pressed a button on the dashboard of the con vertible and' the trunk opened up and out came a nubile maiden with - golden hair, rosy knees, a perfect disposi tion, and the appendix already removed. "This is Svet lana O'Toole," said Portly. "Would you like to marry her t" "Is her appendix out?" said E. Pluribus. "Yes," said Portly. "Okay, hey,"-said E. Pluribus. "Congratulations," said Portly. "And for the happy bride, a set of 300 monogrammed prawn forks." . "Thanks, hey," said Svetlana. "Now then," said Portly to "E. Pluribus, "let us get down to business. My company will start you at $75,000 a year. You will retire at full salary upon reaching the age of 26. We will give you an eleven-story house made of lapis lazuli, each room to be stocked with edible•furniture. Your children will receive it pack',of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades every tvitelve minutes as long as they shall live, We will keep yOur teeth in goOd repair and also the teeth of your wife and children unto the third genera tion. We will send your dentist a pack of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as he shall live, and thereafter to his heirs and assigns... Now, son, I want you to think carefully about this offer. Meanwhile here is 50 thousand dollars in small, un marked bills which places you ,under no obligation what soever " <_; '~^~ 1'; ' k .7.t rzas •.,i. ..;1: $. ~: ' • . 1 .,',A:. ' r'i . :, q. , .', ...........,::::?,.." • • .:; 'q. ' ' -f:: ,:•' 3,;:; 1 . I "Well, it certainly seems like a fair offer," said E. Pluribus. "But there is something you should know. I am not an engineer. In fact I don't go to M.I.T at all. I just walked over here to admire the trees. I am at Harvard, majoring in Joyce Kilmer." "Oh," said Portly. "I guess I don't get to keep the money and the con vertible and the Personnas and the broad, do I ?" said E. Pluribus. "Of course you do," said Portly. "And if you'd like the job, my offer still stands." Speaking of wealth, if you want a truly rich, truly luxurious shave, try Personna Blades, regular or inlect tor, with Burma-Shave, regular or menthol. There's a champagne shave on a beer budget! IVESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968 See YAP personally. One member feels that this may be due, in part, to the "I'm Through With Hugh" button that Ernsberger wore until pressure from his peer group (polite young radicals all) forced him to pocket it. Scott sent an administrative assistant to'con verse with the "unbelievers," who remained unconvinced. Scott voted more 'funds foilhe Appal achian Project even though he knew it wasn't the soundest fiscal policy, the young man ad mitted when pressed, but he is committed to represent the interests of the state of Penn sylvania, and the project was very good for Pennsylvania, it is what his constituents want, and therefore he had to support it. "Pennsylvania polls support Nixon for president. Who does Scott support?" Cooper wanted to know. Well, that is different, Mr. Scott sup ports Gov. Rockefeller, but there are times when a Senator must go against the wishes of his constituents and use his better :bid 50.- ment for the good of 'the country, Scott's administrative assistant said. Someone said "Doublethink." The YAFers also visited the American Conservative Union and National YAF of fices. They spoke with Rep. Johnson, the congressman from the 23rd district which includes State College. Very politically, he wished them good luck. The group also saw Buzz Lukins (R- Ohio), Sen. Dominick (R-Col.), Sen. John Towers (R-Texas), and Sen. Strom Thur mond (R-S. Carolina). On Campus };xvti. (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boyar , "Dobie Gila'," etc.) ~~~ COLLEGIAN ADS ~~ ~~1~ BRING, Q 1968 Max $61114M111 :.::,•,::::::6,-,:;:ag.:..saglwAh
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers