WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1952 Dramatic Croups Seek Talented “There’s no business like show business” is a familiar feeling;'for most of us are in terested in the theater from one side of the lights or another. Newcomers to the campus, not merely content to be'spectators, will find many opportunities in College dramatic activ ities. ' Three organizations Players, Thespians, and Five O’Clock Theater—offer a wide range of dramatic productions during the school year. Experience may be gained, not Junior, Senior Class Elections Held in Spring Forming the primary core in class functioning, senior and jun ior class officers are chosen dur ing All-College elections in the spring. Nominations are made for class officers selected by the’two cam pus political parties, Lion and State, through clique- primaries conducted two weeks before the campus-wide election. Students in each class then vote for their respective class officers. Class - secretary-treasurers are members of the interclass finance committee, Which controls all student funds. To be eligible for an office, a student must have a 1.0 All-Col lege average and be a member of the class in which he is campaign ing for office. He must also be a candidate of a party which is of ficially recognized by the elec tions committee. Class offices are president, vice president, and --secretary-treasurer. Major senior class projects and activities include the class gift to the College, the annual Senior Ball in the spring, the sale of traditional Lion coats, senior awards, the Hall of Fame, class picnic, choosing of the class song, and cooperation with the faculty in commencement preparations. The junior class presents its annual Junior Prom in the fall and also sponsors a class project. Last year the Class of 1953 pre sented “The Greatest Shows of the Century,” a collection of 28 long-playing record albums, to the Pattee Library. Alumni to Get Grid Priority The Alumni Association offers its members, among other ser vices, first priority on reserved football tickets and a subscription to the Football Letter, a personal ized review of each week’s game. The maintenance of biographi cal and occupational records of ■the 50,000 alumni is handled by the association, as are class re unions, the Alumni Institute and Homecoming Weekend, and the sponsorship of 65 alumni clubs, 39 in Pennsylvania Members receive . the Penn Stater, a quarterly newspaper, and the Alumni News, issued seven times a year. Ridge Riley, executive secretary, and his assis tant, Ross B. Lehman, handle the affairs! District, alumni clubs feature campus speakers, advance schol arships, and aid the College with various projects including the annual Glee Club concerts heard throughout Pennsylvania, »ii!imiiiiimiuiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiim!iiiimmii!H!iii!liiil!iiiiim!iiiiiiiimiiiiiiii£ f It's a fact. . . | | It takes a week of Orientation for Freshmen 5 = to get acquainted with Penn State. § 5 But it takes only a few minutes to discover | | that Vic's has thfe best milk shakes in town ! = | 145 S. ALLEN ST. Vies I SllllllllllilllllllllillUlllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliillliliilillllllllilllllllllllilllilllllll^ only in acting, but on the tech nical side as well through make up, lighting, advertising, costum ing, painting, construction, prop erties. and production crews. To Hold Shindig . Membership in Players, College dramatics group, is won through, participation as actors or on crews in Player's shows. Each year the group presents eight plays, four at Schwab Auditorium and four at the downtown, arena- style Center Stage. . A get-acquainted shindig will be held in Schwab Auditorium this week. At the meeting new students may talk to senior man agers, explore the facilities at Schwab, and get full information concerning membership, positions open, arid other details. Anyone may audition for act ing parts by attending : the sev eral tryout periods, time and place of which are - published in the Daily Collegian and circu lated on posters. Experience is hot necessary. Cast Rehearses Daily Calls for crew members are al so made well in advance of a play. Size of the crews varies with different productions. The times that each crew works also vary according to the require ments of each show. .Production crews are 'selected' from the vol unteers by the senior managers of /each production division. After the cast for a show has been chosen, rehearsals are held every night except Saturday for Six weeks. “The Importance of Being Ear nest,” already cast, will open at Center Stage Oct. 10 for a seven week run. Other plays scheduled are “Major Barbara,” “Children of Darkness,” and “Right You Are If You Think You Are” at Center Stage, and ‘.‘Twentieth Century,” “Amphitryon 38,” “Lute Song, and “Merry Wives of Windsor” at Schwab. ‘ Players is governed by a rep resentative £roup of elected offi cers, senior managers, and faculty advisers who,make up the board of control., Officers are elected from the suggestions of a nomi nating committee with additional nominations made from the floor. Musical comedy is taken care of by Thespians and MasqUer ettes, the College song and dance groups. Masquerettes is the fe male counterpart of Thespians. Each year they present a well known musical comedy hit in the spring and an original, student written revue in the fall. , Last year’s productions were ' Rodgers and Hart’s “A Connecticut Yan kee;” and the original “Bottoms Up ”' Thespians JSlecl Directors After doing major work ! on three Thespian shows a person may be a member of Thespians or Masquerettes. Calls are made well in advance of a production, and the selections are made in a manner similar to that followed by Players. Departmental ma n a gers and student directors are chosen by a vote of Thespian members under the supervision of Ray Fortunato, adviser. Five O'clock Theater, an exper- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Pivot, Inkling Include Student Literary Talent Two campus publications which serve as outlets for creative stu dent writing are Inkling, a literary magazine, and Pivot, a poetry magazine. Both appeared on cam pus for the first time in the spring of 1951. ' , Inkling, which is the fourth at tempt'to publish a literary maga zine, includes fiction, poetry, and short essays. As it is hot a staff written magazine, a call for stu dent-written " material will be made shortly. A literary board will judge the material submitted and determine what will be used for publication. Candidates will be called shortly for the various staffs, which include promotion, art, ad vertising, production, and circula tion, and the literary board. The third issue of Inkling, which is sold for 25 cents, will appear this fall, John Hoerr, edi tor, has announced. He also indi cated that if • the fall issue is successful, a spring issue will be published. Previously only one issue was published yearly. Pivot is the only poetry.maga zine to be published at Penn State, and is one of few college poetry magazines. Although most of the material published is written by students in English Composion 13, a poe try workshop, any student may submit material which will be judged by the. staff and Prof. Jos eph L. Griicci, faculty adviser. An open meeting will be. held shortly’ .at which time the . staff for the fall issue will be selected, Professor Grucci said. A new staff will be chosen later in the year for the spring issue. The $25 Fred Lewis Pattee poe try award is presented each year for poetry which appears in the magazine. imental workshop, is often thought of as a stepping-stone to greater heights. A good place for inexperienced actors and actres ses to begin, statistics show that those who begin here usually ad vance to parts in Players’ pro ductions. Once each week during the second semester the group pre sents, script-in-hand, short, one act plays by students written in Dramatics 21 and 421 classes. All work, including-directing and the solving of technical poblems, is done by students. Thirteen plays were produced last year. Casts are chosen from students who tried out for Players shows. Rehearsals usually require seven to eight hours and are held in the daytime. In the play-writing class each script is carefully criticized after the first writing, rewritten, and then briefly enacted. Anyone may submit a play, to these classes if he wishes it considered for Five O’clock Theater production. ±iimiiiiiimiiiiiimiimmiiiiHiiiiiiii£ | vogue [ | BEAUTY SALON i s The coeds, know Vogue s = for the "Paris" •- = aiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiimiiMiiuimimiiir: dimensional haircut. 214 S. ALLEN ST. = Phone 2286 = Little Man on Campus ~-7C * COLLECTS ' . J ot Pattee Library Has 335,185 Volumes There’s an old Penn State custom of saying “I’m going to the library” when you don’t want to disclose your destination. When you do go to the Pattee Library, however, you’ll find a modern build ing with 335,185 books available. In addition to books, the library subscribes to approximately 3200 periodicals, maintains a New York Times and Philadelphia Inquirer file, and has audio-visual aids and photostat departments. - The College library consists not only of the main library building, at the head of the Mall, but also reading and reference rooms in Osmond Laboratory, Mineral In dustries Building, Home Econom ics Building, Main Engineering Building, Forestry Building, Pond Laboratory, Agricultural Building, and Patterson Hall. Place Books on Reserve An index to books in all li braries on campus is in the circu lation room, where most books may be taken out. Also on the second floor is a reference depart ment, which contains dictionaries, almanacs, biographical indexes, etc. At the same desk students may taken out bound copies of periodicals for use iri the room only. Books for required reading are located in the reserve book room on the first floor. Also on the first floor is an open shelf room and a newspaper room. A collection of more than 1700 educational films and recordings, including many in foreign-lan guages, is available in the audio visual aids library, in the base ment. Open Daily The library has set aside two rooms on the fourth floor for Penn State publications and historical material about the College. Library hours are 7:50 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday, 7:50 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, and 2 to 10 p.m. Sunday. The library is actually older than -the College itself. It had 195 volumes in 1858, and a year later, when the College opened, the CLASS of 1956 "KEEP A RECORD OF YOUR COLLEGE DAYS" Let your parents and friends at home 5 follow Campus activities and the Success of i ' the Nittany Lions. | SUBSCRIBE TODAY I $2.00 per Semester $3.75 per Year | Name. ....... : The § Address DAILY j COLLEGIAN \ Enclosed: Campus $2.00 Sem. ( ) $3.75 Year ( ) state College . Pa . | COLLEGE. MAN number had jumped to 1500. The books were kept in a dingy room, and there was no librarian until 1874 when Prof.- William Buckhout took the job. He kept; the room open an hour each day day for those who wanted -• to use it. During the 1889-90 session the library moved to better quarters, on the second floor of Old Main. In 1903 it was moved into Carf negie Hall, a $150,000 gift of An drew Carnegie. > - In .1926 the library’s rating grew from medium to large aa.it passed the 100,000 book mark. The present building, to which a new. wing is being added, was com pleted in 1940 and named for Fred Lewis Pattee, former professor-of English literature and author-of the Alma Mater. ....... College to Receive Scholarship Grant A grant of $5OOO for continua tion of the Foundry Educational'; Foundation program at the Col lege has been approved by the/ board of trustees of the Foundry Education Foundation, Cleveland, according to Marion J. Allen,'' president. The money is used for scholar-"' ships to engineering students taking the foundry options. The” program centers around the De partment of Industrial Engineer-' ing. The new grant brings the total received by the College to $15,00Q” since entering the program in 1950. -PAGE SEVEN By Bibl COLLEGE STUOeNT