First Science Session Classes End Friday Classes will end for some 527 chemists, engineers, and physicists this Friday when the first six-week science session will come to an end. These students have been trying some thing comparatively new in summer sessions at the College, .and .some of them will be finishing work for a' degree right in the middle'of the regular main session. For. a lot. of these scientists, - however, all it means is a -final exam, a two-day holiday, and then registration and a plunge back into the grind again. Marion R. Trabue is director of the entire summer ses sions program. Registration for the second six weeks science session will take place on Monday morning in Recreation Hall. Students will register from 8 to R., in the morning. The new set-up for summer school was announced last March, as an expediency measure for students who wished to finish school before entering the service. Complaints that the three-week periods were not long enough to handle the extensive laboratory work involved in the science courses Dan _Grove Day Sat., July 28 NO. 3-S-51 Seeing Stars THE ' . COLLEGE OBSERVATORY, shown above, is - open every Monday night during the summer 'months for the benefit of any who wish to.do a little exploring into other worlds. No special Program is planned, but the observatory is cTeit MOnday•nights front 9 to 14 p.m. Stock Group To Present 'Anna Christie' CYNeill Prize Play Will'Open Tonight Most theater-goers:feo that a season is not complete • without a Eugene,O'Neilrplay and the Cep ter Stage ; tock company will sat isf3r the local O'Neill' fans by pre senting "Anna Christie" as its second production of the summer season. The, Pulitzer • Prize winning drama will open tonight for • a two-week run at the Hamilton street • theater-in-the-round. Jimmy Ambandos is the direc tor .of the new slimmer theater offering, and just to make certain the family is in the spotlight, his wife;• Francine Toll is in - the lead role of Anna. .Coiege Film Ambandos,. l the producer of the film, "This Is Penn State" and a veteran_of Town and Nine Play ers, formerly, a local stock com pany, is well known among stu dents:and townspeople. Francine To11;Also appeared-in. "Light Up The:Sky which closed last night. George .Miller, who distin - guishedhiniself in a comparative ly,'Small: Part in "Sky", play :Mat-Buirke, the male' lead in to night'S drama. ' Miss' T 611; arril . Joe Bird, w#lo.! is ~Chris- Miller, 'in . ~ Cr 0 U r . 4r ..., ~. •• . hearsing in the afternoons while playing in "Light Up The Sky" at nights for the past weeks. "Stiady. Past" Tonight's play, set on the Bast e= Coast and in Boston, tells of the influence of the - sea on the characters, including Anna who finds that a `.`past" can still offer difficUlties to be handled in the future. ' Joyce Rexford plays Marthy Owen in the production and Lew Shirley is cast as Johnny—the Priest." - -..Tay'Broad handles the "Larry" role and Bill Dunkel plays the Postman. Carl Wagner and Bill Coleman complete the small cast as two Ldngshoremen. Miss Rexford, Coleman and Dunkel all played in the play that ended its run last. night. As a movie, "Anna" drew Greta Garbo and Marie Dressler as its stars, a Pulitzer Prize as a play, and acclaim everywhere as both. 3 Exempt From. Comp Three freshmen enrolled in the 'Main Summer Session have been exempted from taking English Composition- 1. -. They are Charles Harrington; Gloversville, Pa., • Susan Minnich, Landisville, Pa., and. Benjamin also were instrumental in bringing about the change. A considered nine-week period for men and women wish ing to enter the College as new freshmen was dropped when insufficient freshmen expressed interest in the idea. Registration plans for next Monday consist of the usual procedure for going to Rec Hall, procuring a registration envelope if pre-registered, seeing the information desk if not pre-registered, and completing the process in Rec Hall and Willard Hall. One change from previous registrations has been an nounced by J. E. Miller, administration assistant to the di rector of summer sessions. Veterans no longer must report to the armory to complete their registration. Everything has been placed under one roof for everybody registering, with the exception of the fee assessor, located in the ground floor of Willard. A complete list of instructions to registrants appears on page 8 of this issue. STATE COLLEGE, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1951 PCW Head To Address Graduates Dr. Paul R. Anderson, presil dent of the Pennsylvania College for Women, Pittsburgh, will de liver the address at the Summer Sessions Commencement Exer cises to be held at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, August 11, in Recrea tion Bldg. At the Exercises, which will be open to the public, Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, president of the . Col lege,-:will confer more than 500 degrees. A: graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University, Dr. Anderson received his doctor of philosophy degree at Columbia University and also studied at the Union Theological Seminary and the New School for Social Research in New York. Career As Educator Dr. Anderson began his career as an educator at the American University of Beirut, Syria, and later taught at Mac Murray Col lege, Jacksonvile, 111., Lake Erie College, Painesville, 0., Oberlin College, and Lawrence College, before accepting his present po (continued on page eight) A REHEARSAL SCENE from' the new Summer Stock production, "Anna Christie" by Engene O'Neill. Shown are' Joe Bird, left, who plays Chrii Christopher; George D. Miller, right, who plays Mat Burke; and James J. Ainbandos, center, the director. The JAW( cetarc , togight.. Ceske-Wegie. Korean Ambassador Gives U.S. Warning (See Editorial, Page 5) Although he touched very briefly on the subject of the current peace talks in Korea, Dr. You Chan Yang, Korean am b a s's ador to the United States sounded a note of warning to the United States last week at the College. 3rd Concert To Be Given The Bourne Quartet will pre sent the third concert in the Summer Artists Series on Tues day, July '24 in Schwab Audi torium at 8:30. Members of the quartet are Gene Cox, of Alabama and John Patterson, born in Cartharge, Missouri, tenors; Richard Riddell from Denver, Colorado, baritone; and Robert Griffin, from Seattle, Washington, bass. Pennsylvania-born Earl Weid ner is arranger and accompanist for the group. Director Marion R. Trabue WEEK'S WEATHER: Cloudy, cool and threatening PRICE FIVE CENTS "I tell you, my American lis teners," Dr. You said, "she (Rus sia) would play that one card against you, with her own slave armies, but for one reason. The Soviet Union is afraid of yo u. You are number Three on her timetable of wor Id conquest. Asia is Number One, Europe is Number Two. The United States is Number Three." Dr. You sp o k'e before more than 500 listeners last week at the closing session of the fourth annual Radio and Television In stitute at the College. His au dience overflowed the seats in 121 Sparks, sitting on the floor and temporary chairs. Power For Good Th e ambassador hailed radio as a power for good, but only as long as the minds and hands that control it are dedicated to good ness and decency and the dignity of man. Dr. You continued to say that "radio, when controlled by evil minds and evil hands, al so can be a diabolical power for evil." Touching on current armistice talks in Korea, Dr. You predicted that "the false radio, no matter what happens in Korea during these negotiations, will tell the world that peace terms were dic tated to the defeated United Na tions' forces on soil already con taminated by American imperial ists—the exact spot from which the forces of traitor Syngman Rhee, aided by John Foster Dulles, launched, an imperialistic wa r of aggression against the peaceful, democratic forces of the (continued on page eight) Cedar Of Lebanon Tree Presented To Alpha Zeta A rare Cedar of Lebanon tree has been presented to Alpha Zeta fraternity and planted on the campus in honor of the late Cletus L. Gobdling, former member of the fraternity and dean of the Na tional Farm School. The tree, raised from seeds brought to• this country from the University of Beirut, Lebanon, by I. F. Anthony, graduate assis tant in agricultural education, were presented by Mrs. Frank Anthony, of State College, and Mrs. Reuben Yoselson, of Mont rose, daughters of Dean Good-
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