The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 10, 1953, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
AIM Board
Proposes
Probation
Office probation in the Dean of
Men’s office was recommended
for a student charged with drunk
enness and disorderly conduct in
McKee dormitory by the Associa
tion of Independent Men judicial
Board of review last night.
Dean of Men’s office probation
consists of the student’s name be
ing filed in the dean’s office as
an offender. In the advent of an
other offense he may go before
the Senate disciplinary committee
with the possible result of sus
pension or expulsion. The sen
tence will also be recorded on the
offender’s transcript.
- Four other . students charged
with violating the West Dorm
unchaperoned dating code in Mc-
Kee lounge during the Military
Ball weekend were given a warn
ing and instructed to print and
distribute copies of the dating
code to all West Dorm bulletin
boards.
The first offender was appre
hended by a counselor at 3 a.m.
when he was creating a distur
bance in the lounge and later in
the halls. The counselor reported
that the student had also been
rebuked for misconduct before in
the dorms.
The four violators of the un
chaperoned dating code admitted
having non-College women in the
McKee lounge after the time set
by the West Dorm council as the
time for all women to be out. They
pleaded a misinterpretation of the
rules and their ignorance resulted
in the lenient sentence.
Edward Thieme, chairman of
the board, said that the next meet
ing would be at 6:30 p.m. March
23 in the Student Government
room in Old Main.
Little Theater
Offers Comedy
Five O’clock Theater will pre
sent “Cocktails for the Id,” by
Robert Landis, eighth. semester
journalism major, at 5 p.m. today
in the Little Theater, basement of
Old Main.
Appearing in the one-act com
edy are Cliff Crosbie, Bill Cole
man, Nancy Levit, John Price,
Nancy May, Gordon Greer, and
Dick Andersen.
Prim Diefenderfer has directed
the cast. Setting is by Fran Strid
inger, and Lyle Pelton will serve
as technician.
The plot revolves around a man
whose creative talents, are smoth
ered in convention. At a cocktail
party his id revolts and in
duces him to throw out his chest
and get somewhere on his own.
Democrats to Meet
The Young Democratic Club
will meet at 7:30 tonight in 202
Willard. The meeting is open to
the public.
SALES TRAINEES
The Atlantic Refining Co. has openings
for sales trainees in Eastern Pennsylvania
area. Salary plus expenses. Complete train
ing program,. Opportunity for advance
ment, retirement plan, thrift plan, liberal.
vacations,disability allowances and other
benefits. College graduates between 22
and 32 preferred. Write, giving age, edu
cation and experience to P.O. Box 28,
Williamsport, Pa.
ATLANTIC REFINING CO.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Chinese 'Lute Song
Thursday Evening
When the stray sparks of Play
ers’ “Lute Song” illuminate Sch
wab Auditorium at 8 p.m. Thurs
day, Players will have three
contributions to Intern ati o n a 1
Theater Month running simul
taneously.
“Aria da Capo” by Edna St.
Vincent Millay and Christopher
Fry’s “A Phoenix Too Frequent,”
other ITM productions, are cur
rently playing a five-weekend run
at Center Stage.
Adapted loosely from the Chi
nese classic Pi-Fa-Ki, “Lute Song”
traces its origin to the folk dramas
presented by strolling players at
the imperial court of Peiping
around 1040 A.D. The modern ad
aptation by Sidney Howard and
W,ill Irwin preserves the Ori
ental techniques of staging and
inserts music and a touch of Oc
cidental stageciraft for added color.
The play is appropriate for Inter
national Theater Month because
it will give campus audiences an
inkling of the Chinese Theater
and present a timeless story of the
Marine Corps
Offers Course
To Graduates
A ten-week training period of
ficers candidate course resulting
in a Second Lieutenant’s commis
sion in the Marine Corps Reserve
is open to college graduates and
graduating seniors, Maj. Richard
R. Bucher, USMC, has announced.
After successful completion of
the training period at Quantico,
Va., an applicant would receive
a five-month special basic officer
training course before being as
signed to duty with a Marine
Corps ■ organization. While attend
ing this special course there will
be opportunity to compete for a
commission in the regular Marine
Corps.
Requirements for the officers
candidate course are a bachelor
degree in a field other than medi
cine, dentistry, or theology from
an accredited college, and U.S.
citizenship. An applicant must be
between the ages of 20 and 27
and must qualify > physically. A
veteran must have been honor
ably discharged to qualify and a
member of a reserve component
of the armed forces, other than
the Marine Corps, must obtain a
conditional release from that or
ganization.
Classes for the officers candi
date course will convene at Qhan
tico on Thursday and July 9.
Applications for the course and
: additional information can be ob
tained by contacting Major Buch
er in 204 Engineering E.
Bell to Offer Course
The Bell Aircraft Corporation,
Buffalo, N.Y., has announced it
will offer an eight-week engi
neering undergraduate training
program during July and August.
The program will include a series
of 14 lectures concerning the air
craft industry. The field of guided
missiles will also be presented in
the lectures.
customs and life of people in an
other country.
This is the fourth year that
Players have observed ITM;
Founded in 1949 by the American
National Theater and Academy
and the Panel on Dramatic Arts
at the second national conference
of UNESCO, International Theater
Month was'organized to promote
the ideals set forth in the United
Nation’s Declaration of Human
Rights.
Through their interpretation of
man’s struggle for peace and se
curity, actors and playwrights
seek to convey hope for a better
society based on the principles
of international understanding
and cooperation.
During March theaters salute
each other across the seas by pro
ducing special plays to reaffirm
man’s belief that music, art, and
drama constitute an international
language. Director Robert D. Reif
sneider and the cast of .“Lute
Song” .will join touring com
panies, colleges, and high school
'Right You Are
Will Feature
Oswalt, Sarkas
Players’ veterans Jolly Oswalt
and A 1 Sarkas, as Laudisi and
Fola, will play the leads in, “Right
You Are! (If You Think So).”
Warren S. Smith, associate pro
fessor of dramatics, will stage the
comedy by Lougi Pirandello for
a six-week run beginning April
17 at Center Stage.
Others in the cast are Allen
Adair, Sirelli; Dominie Landro,
Agazzi; Clifton Crosbie, Ponza;
Eugene Nepa, police commission
er; Morton Slakoff, the governor;
John Yeatman, the butler; Yvonne
Voigt, Amalia; Betsy Jones, Dina;
Alice Mears, Signora Sirelli; Ro
chelle Zinger, Cini; Nancy Fort
na, Ninni, and Prim Diefenderfer,
Signora Ponza.
Jo Ann Palmer will serve as
stage manager for the final Cen
ter Stage production. Assistant,
director will be William Coleman.
Newsreels first appeared in' this
country in 1910.
GOODYEAR AIRCRAFT CORPORATION
INTER VI EWI NG MARCH 12,13,1953
REPRESENTATIVES of Goodyear Aircraft Corporation, Akron, Ohio will
be on your campus to interview seniors and graduate students! in the follow
ing technical study:
•MECHANICAL
•INDUSTRIAL
•ELECTRONICS
D E S IG N —Complete lighter and
heavier-than-aircraft and compo
nents, airframes, power plant in
stallations; controls; hydraulics;
electronic systems; fuel cells,
canopies, wheel and brakes, etc.
DEVELOPMENT—MissiIe, airship,
jet aircraft and helicopter pro
jects; electrical and electronic
systems .servomechanisms, fiber
resin laminates and many other
projects having both military
and non military applications.
GOODYEAR AIRCRAFT CORPORATION
to Open
in Schwab
drama groups producing a play to
illustrate the theater’s service to
world peace. This year theaters in
Hawaii, Canal Zone, Japan, apjl
Canada have joined, the band'
wagon to observe ITM.
Plays are chosen from three
categories: scripts concerning
man’s long struggle, for peace,
freedom, justice, and equality, in
cluding anti-war plays like “Aria
da Capo”; plays written by the
great poets and authors of for
eign countries, such as “A Phoe
nix Too Frequent” by British
playwright Fry; and like “Lute
Song,” plays which sympathetic
ally reflect the culture of another
country.-
In “Lute Song” is revealed the
ancient Chinese custom of renew
ing the royal blood through inter
marriage of royalty and the most
promising scholars that could be
scouted fr.om the provinces. Per
formed for over 500 years by Chi
nese theaters everywhere, “Lute
Song” or Pi-Pa-Ki is the “Uncle
Tom’s Cabin” of the Chinese stage.
Five to Attend
Hotel Show
Richard M. Bower, assistant
professor of hotel administration,
and four students in hotel admin
istration are attending the annual
Midwest Hotel Show in Chicago.
Students attending are Nich
las Melograna and Walter Redel,
representing Sigma Eta Alpha,
professional society in hotel ad
ministration; and Anthony Kon
stant and Thomas List, of the
Greeters Club, an organization for
prospective hotel men. Members
or Sigma Eta Alpha may discuss
plans for a national hotel'honor
ary with the other participating
schools.
Belle Lettres to Meet
Belles Lettres Club will meet
at. 7:30 tonight in Simmons Hall
lounge instead of Atherton as pre
viously scheduled.
A. O. Lewis, F. I. Gwynn and
R. W. Condee will speak on “The
Case for Poetry.”
Attention June Graduates
Apply NOW lor interviews at your Placement Office
•AERONAUTICAL 'ELECTRICAL
•METALLURGICAL ‘CIVIL
•ENGINEERING ‘MATHEMATICS
•PHYSICS
for opportunities in
PLANT ENGINEERING Light
heat power application including
machine design.
PRODUCTION ENGINEERING
All phases metal fabrication man
ufacture ' . ,
STRESS AND WEIGHT ANALY
SIS ■
TOOL PLANNING including Tools,
Dies, Jigs, 'and fixtures,
AKRON 15, OHIO
TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1953
Bowel OK's
Suspension
Of Punham
Z The Temple University board
of trustees recently gave its ap
proval to the suspension of Dr.
Barrows Dunham because of, his
refusal to answer questions asked
by the House un-American activ
ities committee.
In endorsing the suspension, the
board issued the statement the
board “approved the actions of its
officers in this matter and direct
ed the officers to take necessary
steps to. determine the status of
Dr. Dunham, in order that the
university, which is a state-aided
institution, may fully frank
ly comply with its obligations un
der the Pennsylvania Loyalty Act
and to the community.”
A report of the Dunham action
was given the board by William
W. Tomlinson, Temple, vice pres
ident. Dunham was suspended
week before last by Dr. Robert
L. Johnson, Temple president: -
Dunham’s refusal to answer
House committee questions took
place Feb. 27. - ;
A special faculty-administra
tion committee set up bjr Temple
to handle loyalty cases will grant
Dunham a hearing, although the
date for the hearing is still un
announced. • • ••••
Business Group to Meef
Discussion of final plans for the
state-convention and collection of
dues will take place at the Future
Business Leaders of America
meeting at 7:15 tonight in the
recreation room of Thompson/Hall.
WRITE A LETTER HOME
.. . on PENN STATE
STATIONERY 65c,
$5 in sales, you gel $1
in merchandise FREE
BX in the TUB
} *3.