Sixty Brubeck Tickets Remain About 60 tickets for the i College, where Darius Milhaud !encouraged him to use jazz in his Dave Brubeck j a z z concert composition assignments. will be available to students A group of Mills students formed a workshop band for from 9 a.m. to noon and from experimentation, which became 3 p.m. to 5 p.m, today at the the Dave Brubeck Octet. The Retzei Union desk. three members of the rhythm section of this gro u p began Tickets also will be on sale to j playing on a San Francisco :a non-students at the same hours dio show. In 1951 when Des- The price of these tickets is Si mond joined the three. the Bru- each. Students must present their beck Quartet was born. 1 .activity-identification card to get . The quartet has won top honors, tickets. 'he Brubeck Quartet will ;in popularity polls conducted by pre- ,Metronome, Playboy and Down; sent the third concert in the stu- 113eai magazines since 1952. It has! dent-sponsored Artist's Series at I been credited with strongly in 31:30 p.m. Sunday in Recreation Ball. . _ ~/ Appea , " .... Ly I fluencing young musicians in the The quartet is headed by musicians. He revolted against I. !development of contemporary, Brubeck at the piano, with Paul music and began to study pre- J azz ' Desmond on alto saxophone, medicine at the College of the The quartet spends six months Jo. Morello on drums and Nor- Pacific. In his sophomore year he ,a year touring the United States man Bates on bass. Desmond switched to music and graduated !and Canada. The other six months also plays clarinet and piano. with a degree in it. tare spent In the San Francisco Brubeck, 36. was born m Con- Following service in France IBay area. rehearsing, composing cord, Calif. His mother and two during World• War 11, he studied!and preparing for the coming older brothels were riceomplislied at the graduate school of Millstour. . University Given $5OOO By Wilkinsburg Alumnus A bequest of $5OOO has been' Initiates of Gamma Phi Bela granted the ljniverity by the µ•ill are Doukeni Baroutsis, Jean Ben-.: of the late J11111(.5 Arnel, of Wilk- ninger, Pamela Chamberlain, Vir-,! insburg, ginia Gross, Dorothea Harm Arnel died on Aug. 21. He re- Irene Horvath, Marilyn Krieble, ceived hie bachelor of science Mary Ellen Paxton, Carolyn Ross,. degree in mechanical engineering Rosalie Tenney, Claire van Deusen from the 'University in 1909, and Joyce Wagner. i USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS "in a big company, a young man can get to tackle big jobs" "The thing that has impressed me most in my two years at General Electric." says 25-year-old Yusuf A. Toler, manager of Aerodynamics Laboratory Inves tigations. "is the challenging opportunity open to young people here. My field is guided-missile research the nation's top-priority defense job. Because of the scope of the company's research and development program. I've had the opportunity to work with tech nical experts in many related fields. And I've seen at first hand the responsibility which General Electric has given to younger men proof to me that in a big company a young man can get to tackle big jobs." The research being done by Dr. Yusuf A. Yoler is significant not only to himself, but to General Electric and the security of the nation as well. At present, the company is participating as a prime contractor on three of the four long-range ballistic missiles pro- Co-ed' Ls Nelson Presents Article Clifford A. Nelson, associate professor of accounting, presented a paper on 'Training Office Em ployes" at a recent Efficient Ter minal Management course con ducted here by the Institute of Public Safety. gramed by the Ti. S. government. Yoler, who is play ing an important role in this work, directed the design and development of the world's largest hypersonic shock tunnel a device which will "test-fly" missile nose cones at speeds over 15,000 mph. Progress in research and development as well as in every other field of endeavor—depends on how well young minds meet the challenge of self-development. At General Electric there are more than 29,000 col lege graduates, each of whom is given the opportunity to develop to his fullest abilities. In this way, we be.; lieve, everybody benefits the individual, the com pany, and the country. Thstress Is Ova Most Important Ram, GENERAL cg ELECTRIC Thespian Sh (Continued from page one) 60-yard drop-kick field goal. Richard Christian established his talent as a ventriloquist per forming for The "TGIF Club"; but Friday's and Saturday's audiences will find out the an swer to the question: "Why did Thursday's audience hesitate to laugh?" It could be said that Christian's routine was "in bad taste," whatever that is. The show was troubled with eight major substitutions for peo ple stricken with colds or flu. As a result, many potentially good scenes and numbers were disap pointing. However. no amount of sudden good health. will help the last scene in the show, "Final Exami nations,"f which was an unsuccess ul take-off on big-money quiz ishows. The idea of the "quiz !show" was to determine students' Ifinal grades at graduation. But neither the questions nor the an swers were very clever. Phoebe English's choreography was top-notch in "La Mess." This was a number in which four coed dancers step in and out of paint buckets to music under the direc tions of the "noted artist," Spi casso, producing a "modern mas terpiece,"aptly entitled, "La Mess." The Thespian orchestra was badly depleted by the flu—it was short four saxaphones, a bass and a trumpet—so the di- rectors of the show might find it a worthwhile suggestion to use the show's more lively numbers for the short overture to the second act. The orchestra really missed the instruments and lost much on the slow num• hers used, especially when the audience needed a fast intro duction. On the whole, "A Great Future" 'is weak. To save the show at its second and third performances the action will have to be stepped up. No audience in the world likes to sit and wait for things to hap pen. There is a lot -of good talent in the show but the material Is not, certainly, top-notch. - 13,492 Readers 'pee These Ads CLASSIFIEDS ADS MUST BE IN 111 ii :SO SAIL THE PRECEDING DAY RATES-17 words or least 1i0.511 Ons insertion WS Two insertions $l.OO Three insertions Additional words 3 for .15 for orb dos of insertion. FOR SALE 4 TICKETS tozether. Row AA. See. WA Homecoming game. 44.00 ea. Call ext. 412 after 5:30 AD 7-7435. TWO VANDERBILT tickets. Call ext. 3590 ask for Peter. 1964 29 it. HOUSE Trailer, very good con• dition. Priced Reasonable. Phone EL 6-4374 after 6 p.m. or write Box 437 Milesburg. HARMONY "Broadway" Spanish Guitar. Used three week;. Retails at 676, will Fell for $4O. Phone Port Matilda 27-R-16 after G p.m. ONE TICKET for Vanderbilt game—GO. yard line. Call HO 6-6584 after 7 pan. RACOON COAT, rite 7, Call AD 7-2337. Ask for Denny. ROOMS FOR RENT SELECT ROOMS with bath for parents of atudents weekend, CUR AD 7-4850 or AD 7-7792 and azlc for C. FL Stelzer. WANTED TAT' DANCERS. Barbershop Quirrteta and other talented Indica to compete for prizes In Independent Talent Show Oct. 28. Sign up at Hub desk. ROOMMATE WANTED by male student, suite or two rooms. Call AD 7-4850 or • AD 7.7792, Litt for C.R. ONE-CAR Garage in State College for S months. Call J. Daum - AD 7-1919. WANTED TO Buy a portable typewriter in rood condition. Call AD 7.4850 ask far Mrs. C. P.. Stelzer. HELP WANTED 1 WAITER. 1 Kitchen Help. Apply Mn. Gifford at 7.13 T. 217 E. Nittany • Ave. WANTED-2 diihwaAbers. Lambda Chi Al. pha fraternity. Call Skip Hartman AD 7-2602. MEN needed for kitchen help. Call AD R-5795. , SMALL GERM in Dorm that flu away. If caught. please bring to FROTH Cir culation meeting in HUB Auditorium at 6:15 p.m. Monday. Oct. 21. whitegoTd wrist. ONE LADIES' Loncine watib, between Simmons and Boucke on Wed. Finder please call Marlene. 473 Sim mons. Reward DARK-RIMbIED Glaaseq. tan case. Vicinity of Temp. or Hub. Please call exL 974 McElwain. RCA TRANSISTOR radio, last Thursday in McAllister Hall—also grey suede jacket Monday Oct 14. Urgent—will freeze. Call ext. 2941. VALUABLE BOOK signed by author E. E. Cummings titled ''Santa Claus". Please turn into Hub desk or call AD 7-2392. IN NORTH End basement of Siarks-- Eraincoat Fri. Oct. 11 between 4 and 9. Call AD 7-7901. Reward. $lO REWARD for return of lost ruby 'OB class ring, size 10 1 .. Phone John Reed AD 5-4928. FOUND ONE BALL POINT Pen and one metal lihebter. Call Jim AD 7-4368. MICRONITE FILTER found in HUB - - Owner may claim at FROTH circulation meeting in HUB Auditorium at 6:15 p.m. Monday, Oct. 21. MISCELLANEOUS SENIORS AND graduate students who wish to subscribe to the following at reduced student rates: Business Week -4.00; Chemical Week 2.50: Chemical En. gineering 3.50; Electrical World 3.00; Power 3.00. McGraw Hill Publishing Co.. 8303 Loretto Ave., Phila. 15, Pa. TURKEY SHOOT—turkeys or cash prises every Friday nite 5 p.m. Ferguson Lions Club, Lions Park, Pine Grove Mills, Pa. LOCAL REPAIR Service on all makes of tyywna per& We will-call for and deliver your typewriter. brittamy Office Equipment. AD 8-6125. FRESH PRESSED CIDER- Track will be at Werner's Freezer Freels Saturday. eve. nines. Sunday afternoons and Ironing% Pleas* bring sun. FOR GOOD RESULTS USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers