PAGE FOUR Pivot on Sale Tiacl4-o-y By BARBARA McCOLLOUGH Collegian Staff Writer Pivot, the annual publication of the Poetry workshop, will go on sale today. It will be available later in downtown bookstores. The magazine, founded and di- I rected by Joseph L. Grucci, associate professor of English composition, is a collection of poems by students, fac ulty, and staff members. The newest edition contains "Free At Last"; a poem about Dr. Martin Luther King and his work in America's civil rights movement by Franklin H. Ewald, recipient of the Samuel Barsky Memorial Award. Ewald is a senior at the University majoring in zoology. The publication will contain several other selections by students who have TIM Pushes Model Lease Plan The Town Independent Men's Council unani mously agreed last night to the passage of a formal resolution, proposed by Dave Vinikoor, Legal Awareness Committee chairman, that "urges the Immediate acceptance and institution" of TlM's model lease plan. Vinikoor said he has met with a subcommittee of landlords from the Chamber of Commerce in State College, and they have "agreed that the lease is fair." The committee will meet with its clients and will notify TIM by May 27 of its decision on Science Student C ounci l ® Aid First-Term . Students 11111111111111111111111111111111111111M11111111111111111110111111111111111111111111111 The Science Student Council has an- of the faculty advisers because "the aid given nounced the implementation of a "Big to the freshman is often insufficient due to Brother Program" to assist incoming fresh- a lack of time and information." Worgul men in the College of Science. Aid will be said that each adviser will be assigned from extended to freshmen over the Summer three to five advisees. Students interested in Term on a trial basis to be followed by a advising for the coming terms may register full-scale advising program in the fall. at the HUB desk. According to Thomas Worgul, president The adviser program developed by the of the science student council, the ' Big science student council is part of a wider Brother program was conceived to aid first effort on the part of the student council sys term students in adapting to "courses, study tern to decrease the gap between the student habits, social problems and other problems and his college. A similar system to aid new they encounter during their first term." Big ..tudents is now in operation within the Col- Brothers will work in conjunction with the lege of Human Development, while the Col • dean of students' office, said Worgul. lege of Arts and Architecture and the Col- He added that the advisers' efforts will lege of Education are in the process of be directed toward supplementing the work planning advising programs of their own. • HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY Entertainment HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY HI-WAY ANDY (THE HI-WAY PIZZA MAN) IS CELEBRATING SPRING WEEK WITH ENTERTAINMENT ALL THIS WEEK TUE. THE NEW OLD-TIME WOOLEY THUMPERS JUG MUSIC 9-12 WED. SHERRY ERHARD DOC SHEPPARD FOLK MUSIC 9.12 THUR. WE THE LIVING 9-12 Hir-WAY 112 S. GARNER Closing Time Extended To 1 A.M. University Union Board - .:.tlill'l . Z.lll:.'l'::f'Xill . l_ s.'.Z'i:. :::.1101.,',.1 Folksinger and Composer On Campus May 14 -18 TONIGHT Magazine in 18th Year Poetr received awards for their outstanding contributions. They are: Russell D. Holzer, the Anthony James Grucci Me morial Award; J. Donald Hollinger, the Margot Grossman Weinbaum Memorial Award; Phyllis Berger, the Cushing de Berbardo Poetry Prize; and C. Ever ett Cornman, the Pearl Weinberger Memorial Award. Each of the five awards of $25 is :invited to undergraduate contributors, This issue will also include "Tama rack" by Sen. Eugene McCarthy and a statement from the senator on poetry. Grucci said that Pivot, now in its eighteenth year, is one of the country's few university literary publications which is self-supporting and independ ent. He also mentioned that it has a current circulation of 3000 with sub scribers from all over the world. Among Council Ur-es 'lmmediate Acce • tance' the lease Vinikoor said the acceptance of a standardized lease by the landlords would be a major accom plishment for TIM. He also stated that the sub committee's attitude toward the document is a "good sign," because the formal acceptance of TlM's lease will be a prerequisite for TlM's ap proved-disapproved housing list. In other matters, Vinikoor officially swore into office, Joseph Myers as president, Richard Wynne as first vice president, Terry Klasky as presents Admission Free 7:30 HUB Lounge THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERS' TY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA these subscribers are the University of London library and the British Mu seum, as well as several universities. Grucci, who has published four books of original poetry and transla tions of Italian poetry, created Pivot eighteen years ago when he first came to the University to teach English 113 (poetry workshop). He felt that stu dents writing poetry should have the opportunity to have their work pub lished, so he established Pivot as an outlet for them. Pivot has been praised by critics for its high level of taste and talent as well as for its excellence as a literary publication. Grucci is pleased with Pivot's suc cess and said that "Pivot is one of the finest little ambassadors Penn State has." second vice president, and Ronald Chesin as treasurer. Vice president Wynne announced that Tom Gorman of the Legal Awareness committee will speak on the advantages and disadvantages of town living at 10:30 p.m. today at the Findlay Union Building in East Halls. Ellen Edgar, a representative from the Town Women's Organization, discussed the new organ ization's problems of affiliation as members of the Association of Women Students' jurisdiction and as downtown residents. 11111111111111111111111111111 1 11111 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 FOR BEST RESULTS USE CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP MONDAY thru SATURDAY 10 AM to 9:30 P.M: EMILIO DADDARIO Connecticut Rep. CHOOSE IT! CHARGE IT! Daddario Discusses Side Effects of Scientific Growth Congressman Emilio Q. Daddario, D- than on those of scientists and engineers, Conn., last night expressed concern about Daddario said. He mentioned the tremendous the possible "dangerous side effects" which cost of current research, and conversely, the accompany the growth of technology. effects of scientific advancement on eco- Daddario said that possible problems re- nomic growth. view of these considerations, suiting from technological growth, must be In Dad anticipated in a highly developed, techno- dario concluded that Congress must assume ' logical society. a leadership rolein research—guiding it, Daddario's address on the interaction of providing support and incentive, keeping the public informed and foreseeing and fore government with science and engineering is stalling difficulties. the first of a series of lectures by men promi- Throughout his address, he stressed the nent in the field of science sponsored by the Nelson W. Taylor Memorial Fund. vital importance of knowledge and its re sponsible application for the benefit of so- In his lecture, Daddario spoke of the ciety. He praised the University several promise which science holds for a better times for successfully fostering such appli life. He warned of various "less obvious, cation. but significant, problems." Among these, he Daddario has served in the House of cited the "sinister inroads" against personal Representatives since 1959. He is chairman liberty and privacy by listening and record- of the House Subcommittee on Science, Re ing devices, and the possibility of man's search and Development, and a member of rapidly advancing technology upsetting the balance of nature. manned subcommittee which oversees th e manned space flight program of the Na- Much of what happens in the area of tional Aeronautics and Space Administra research depends more on political decisions tion. 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