PAGE EIGHT Enrollment For -Player's Although approximately .50 students enrolled in Players Workshop classes Monday night, interested persons may still sign up this week and next, 'Betty Lou Morgan, president of Play ers, has announced. .The , Players Workshop:.started for the • first time last fall,_' has been reorganized to give practical instruction in •the back-stage phase of play production. Classes will be taught by senior crew managers of Players. The V class in properties, under the direction of Renee Kluger, and the makeup class with Kath arine Scheetz in' charge, will both meet 'at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the basement of Schwab Auditorium. Lighting Class to Meet Instruction in technical work, including painting and construc tion, will be given at 7 p.m. to-: morrow by Frances Stridinger. The room will be announced in tomorrow's Daily Collegian. __The class in lighting, under the direction of Harry Culbertson, will have its _first meeting at' 7:15 p.m. Monday in the basement of Schwab Auditorium.• The advertising group,,with William Raymond instructing, meets at 7 p.m. Tuesdays in ,the loft .of Schwab Auditorium. Wes ley Pfirman's sound class will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays in .the lama "-Iva% co. ca#,Kred Chesterfield aa/kf edtielbrAllim° /t. J6I/li(Ph77elEL. 51GNED....... . ... Is Still Open Workshop sound room of Little Theater: the costume class, directed by Ruth Harding, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesdays in the basement of Schwab Auditorium. ' "Practice Play Set :Each• group will meet one hour each week for five weeks. Mem bers will then be encouraged to join another class to- broaden their • lmowledge of behind-the scenes work. As classes meet on different 'nights students. may at tend-more than one class. In order to gain more practical experience, each workshop will attempt-..t0 solve the 'production problems of James Barrie's play, "The Admirable Crichton." The properties workshop, for instance, will locate and assign properties, set up a cue sheet, and make ar rangements to run the hypotheti cal show. Another play will be chosen at the end of the five-week -period. • - Eventually, attendance at work shops will be a requirement in order to work on Players' Centre Stage and Schwab Auditorium productions; Miss Morgan said. • There -are almost a million pigs on Pennsylvania farms; and more sausage is produced here than in any other state. PROPRIET OR THE "DAILY,COLLEGIAN. STATE• COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Noose -- (Continued from pane one) when they saw the word commu nism. One fellow asked, 'What are you trying to do?," while an other said he could tell what the whole thing meant in a two syl lable word—"nothing." An added attraction in the peti tion was the fact that it was pro posed to ask professors to de vote ten minutes of each class hour for one week to the discus sion of- individual dissatisfaction with our freedoms as they exist today. This really caught the wo men's fancy. Many said, "Hey, is this true? Are we going to get ten minutes off from each class?" After receiving an affirmative answer, they were convinced that this was something to sign. Penn State's athletic teams could have been crippled if the right given in the petition was carried out. Also, a few top stu dent government leaders could be removed from their positions by way of the noose. One student leader went so far as saying that he is a trustworthy soul. "I'll sign, but let me read it sometime," he said hastily. Of the 48 men that didn't sign, only 24 recognized the phrase which would sentence them to possible death, while •13' women out of 37 that wouldn't sign picked up this sentence. • Ironical as it may seem, the last sentence of the petition read, "Yes, we must keep our freedoms if we want to keep our democracy and our lives." ~'~1'~ : i~:i I:I.:t3 !!=l= , ' ~~;;~<:: ~~4+ MORE 'a~:~:i : ::::`:'i: ....... Z do Copyright 195ei bIGGIFITA Atte, Toutwo Ca.