—The Daily Collegian Thursday, December 6, 1973 GSA plans varied winter ONE SUBJECT ONE SUBJECT COMPOSITION COMPOSITION BOOK With PENN BOOKS STATE SEAL C SIZE 8" X 10" NARROW—COLLEGE AND WIDE RULED NARROW & A 61p 80' PAGES COLLEGE Lii wir e Bound 80 PAGES RULED METAL BOOKENDS BIC PENS HI-LITERS PLAN CALENDAR ERASERS MUSIC NOTEBOOKS FLAIR PENS THEME COVERS TRANSPARENT COVERS DRAWER ORGANIZER CLEAR REPORT COVERS BLACK BINDER EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND TYPING PAPER 100 SHEETS to BOX Medium or Heavy OUR PRICE 1 00 ONLY • POSTER BOARD MANILA PAPER FOLDERS THIRD CUT 69t IN MANY COLORS 1.9 t ONE DOZEN 22 X 27 PKG. eha4ge' MATTER litoth your r F t- ' AN CARD SAVE NOW WITH THESE LOW PRICES FOR GIANT BACK-TO-SCHOOL BARGAINS 0. C. MURPHY CO. -- First Quality Always STATE COLLEGE 127 S. Allen St. Open Mon. thru. Sat. 9:00 till 9:00 Park in the New Pugh Street Garage A social Friday night will kick off this term's activities for the Graduate Student Assciciation. The social, planned for 8 p.m. in 102 Kern, is one of several to be held Winter Term, according to GSA member Lew Hirsch. Hirsch said ,GSA will sponsor a coffeehouse with various musical groups scheduled to entertain every Friday night this term. GSA also will sponsor the Regional Film Invitational and Colloquy Feb. 8-10 in Schwab. Students from colleges in the six states neighboring Pennsylvania and Washington D.C. will be eligible to enter thg contest by sending their films for judging and public viewing at Schwab. Judges for the film contest will be Arthur Barron, a documentary producer who has won two Emmy Awards and produced the motion picture "Jeremy;" Willard •Van Dyke, director of the film department at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City; and Hollis Alpert, who wrote "Sex and the The COLLEGE 15& 44 and SAVE AT MURPHY'S FOUR SUBJECT COMPOSITION BOOK With Penn State Seal Size 8 1 / 2 X 11" 180 pages 1.29 THREE SUBJECT AT 86' FILLER PAPER NARROW OR COLLEGE RULED 79t CORK BULLETIN BOARDS 24 X 36 $4.98 18 X 24 $2.98 Cinema" for Playboy magazine. Hirsch said two $5OO prizes will be provided by Schmidt's of Philadelphia as well as category awards of 050 and $lOO for first and second prizes. Besides judging the films Alpert will speak on "Art and the Media," a seperate portion of the Colloquy. GSA has established a travel library iirKern with source books for any trip a student wishes to take. "These facilitits will help the student plan his travel itinerary," Hirsh said. The GSA also has separate libraries for taxes and gardening. In addition to the socials, coffeehouses and film contest GSA will sponsor workshops on various subjects and several demonstrations, Hirsch said. "We may even have a few improvisational theaters as in other years and possibly some other plays in our coffeehouse," he said. Also this term GSA will study graduate student taxes and plans to publish a booklet on the top in mid-January. STATIONERY STORE ENGINEERS HOLDER W/PAD 1.77 ONE SUBJECT COMPOSITION BOOK With Penn State Seol Size 8 1 /2" X 11" 100 pages Wire-O-Bound COLLEGE AND NARROW RULING di 9 € CLIP BOARD PENCILS - 1 doz. 3 X 5 FILE CARDS FILE CARD BOX ENGINEERS PAD DESK FILE ORGANIZER CARTERS-MARK-A-LOT SUBJECT DIVIDERS EL—MARKO MARKERS ENVELOPES HOLD-IT WRITING TABLETS STACKING LETTER TRAY PAPER PUNCH STAPLER KIT CARBON PAPER 500 SHEET FILLER f m ‘ By JAN rt opt ity ~..4 CHAPLICK Collegian Staff Writer A special "arts term" concentrating on courses in music education, art education, theater arts and creative dance is now an option for elementary alucation majors. According to Robert W. Ott, assistant professor of art education and program 57' 61' 27' 49' 69' 1.29 48' 29' 59' 39' 39' 1.29 89' 98' 39' 99$ ion offered; coordinator, the 13-credit arts term was designed to focus on the arts as a center in the lives of school children instead of teaching arts on the periphery. Ott said the curriculum is designed to reach the teacher who is with children every day and wishes to integrate arts in daily school work. Patricia S. Heigel, instructor in physical education and one of the arts term originators, said concentrating the arts in one term enables elementary education majors to discover how the arts are related. Students learn how to work with school children at their individual levels, she added. Ott said the term has two basic parts: learning the basic skills and knowledge, and teaching children. During last spring's arts term when the program was still in its experimental stage, the participants went to New York for theater productions. Some students Pall Term acted as tour guides for more than 600 school children who visited the Art Museum to see the Three Swiss Painters exhibit. Nationally known figures in arts education also held day long workshops for students in arts term. Ohio officials immune from trial, lawyers say WASHINGTON AP)— Lawyers for former Ohio Gov. James Rhodes and his National Guard chiefs told the Supreme Court Tuesday their clients are subjeono criminal prosecution but not civil law suits concerning the 1970 Kent State University confrontation. The families of three of the four students slain during the confrontation Sandra Scheuer, Allison Krause and Jeffrey Miller—sued Rhodes, former Kent State president Robert White and five men who were National Guard officials at the time of the confrontation. They seek some $l2 million in damages. Lawyers for the families have asked the Supreme Court to overturn lower court decisions dismissing the cases. The suits were brought under an 1871 law prohibiting state officials from depriving citizens of their civil rights. Charles E. Brown, arguing for all the officials, asserted that sovereign immunity protects state officials from civil suits arising from their conduct of office. Justice Byron R. White asked whether Brown would make the same claim of immunity against allegations that officials knowingly deprived an individual of civil rights. "Probably not," if those allegations were p"roved, Brown conceded "But would you submit those allegations to proof in court'?" White questioned, alluding to the lower court decisions, blocking presentation of evidence in the Kent State suits Brown delpurred, finally Arnold Air Society presents f e tier . -anr0.41.4. 4. • The Wild Bunch 7:00 & 9:30 105 Forum Dec. 6-9 ATTENTION PHOTOGRAPHERS Here's your chance to show your work. An exhibit will be held Dec. 15 during the conference "People," being coordinated by AWS Photographs are to he: on the subject of women black and white matted Deliver to 203 H HUB by Dec. 12 Both Ott and Heigel sal they feel one advantage of the program is that a. team di instructors coordinate the program while teaching separately. Another important featun of the program, Heigel said, is that students art encouraged to attend concerts, plays and museum and have an opportunity fp focus on the creative aspect of the arts by making films or creating dances for children. Cathy Jo Drapcho (Sttt elementary education), who participated in. the progrant Fall Term, said she "really liked it." She said the program gave her knowledgt she' could use in planning courses for future classes. But another student, said she found the program beneficial only fcr the first few weeks but after that was "fed up." She said there should be scheduling changeS because more time was needed for planning. Amy Coopersmith, (3rd elementary education) said her only reservation was she felt more time could have been devoted to teaching stu dents to use the film projector. Otherwise. she said, the term achieved its goal of inte grating the arts for work with children suggesting under repeated questioning that the allegations themselves would have to contain some element of proof before warranting a full-fledged hearing. White then raised questions about the applicability of immunity to state officials accused of violating criminal laws protecting civil rights. "I would say they would not be immune from criminal prosecution," Brown conceded. Pursuing the argument, Justice Thurgood Marshall asked, "are you telling me that Congress meant to apply this 1871 law criminally but not civilly?" Brown said yes. Marshall retorted, "What in the world do you have to back that up?...you want us to say this man can go to jail for five years but can't be sued for S 2 damages?" "Yes, your honor," Brown replied, "I arri saying that loud and clear." No criminal charges have ever been brought against Rhodes or any of the National Guardsmen in connection with the deaths of the four students slain when a Guarl contingent opened fire on a campus gathering on May 4, 1970. Scotch low GLASGOW, Scotland (APl—Bad news for Scotch whisky drinkers. Shortage heating oil has forced Scotti 4 distillers to cut production. The Scotch Whisky Association yesterday said the situation is severe. Oil is vital to distillers through many stages of production. in; eluding the steam-heating of stills. Scotch whisky is Britain'l biggest dollar earner.
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