FRIDAY. OCTOBER 17. 1 Gielgud For Roc B, No more student c appearance of Sir Joh: scheduled for 8:30 p.m Student tickets we student tickets were cc Council Plat LA Expense For 1958-19! Expenditures of the Arts Student Council foi are expected to total $9 follows: Estimated 1958-1959 B Balance from 1U57-58 Expected Income Student fees Cabinet allocation Key* (member** shares paid in) Total | Expeeted Expenses Material-!, supplies - Key*. Hhintdes Scholarship Domtion* Cateer NUrht Miscellaneous Already exnemlod thU aemester (Council mixer) 5305.38 Total s<*os 38 Ejected balance, June 30, 1959 $1G4.27 Dean Elected To BusAd Post Dean Ossian R. MacKenzie of; the College of Business Adminis tration has been elected secre tary-treasurer of the Middlo At lantic Association of Colleges of Business Administration. He was chosen for the post at the association’s annual meet ing at Ryder College, Trenton, N.J. The association is composed of schools and colleges of business in New York, New Jersey, Penn sylvania. Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia. Besides MacKenzie, Associate Dean David H. McKinley, Assis tant Dean Lawrence E. Fouraker and Dr. G. Kenneth Nelson, head of the Department of Accounting and Business Statistics, attended the meeting. McCarthy Given Research Position Dr. Robert D. McCarthy has; been named research associate ini dairy science, effective Oct. 1. I McCarthy will work with Dr. Stuart Patton, associate professor 1 of dairy science, on a research! project sponsored by the U.S.] Public Health Service. The pro-j ject is concerned with milk fats; and their relationship to arterio sclerosis. He received his master of sci ence degree in dairy science and was also awarded a doctor of philosophy degree by the Univer sity of Maryland. USA Will Make Final Money Returns Monday The Used Book Agency will make final returns of money and unsold ..books from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Monday in the Hetzel Union card room. The ÜBA will alsi money and books from p.m. today in the cardr< RADIO Service and Stippfiei •Car Radios • Portable Radios :a=s \lflSß State College TV 232 3. Allen St to Perform Led House yBOBBILEVINE >r non-student tickets remain -for the i Gielgud, British actor and director, tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. :|re gone by 5 p.m. Thursday, and non impletely sold out by 4 p.m. yesterday. Gielgud, who is probably best known io the American audience for his portrayal of Cassius in the 1952 motion pic ture, "Julius Caesar," last ap peared on the American stage in 1950 when he played in Christopher Fry's "The Lady's Not for Burning." The production, which origi nally opened at the Globe Thea-j tre in London in 1949, played at! the Royale Theatre in New York before going on tour. Gielgud has made a total of 47 major appearances in 37 plays and readings. In the last 25 years he has played 35 major roles, re peating many of them in several different productions of the same play. Liberal [ 1958-59 115.38, as I iidgel slB4 65 5850.00 lOO.OO 25.00 His last play in London was "Nude With Violin” at the Globe Theatre in which he played the same role that was played by Noel Coward in New York. He has just completed direct ing Terrence Ratiigan's new play starring Margaret Leigh ton which is currently playing in London's West End. Next month he will open as Woolsey in the Old Vic’s produc tion of Shakespeare’s ‘‘Henry VIII.” .—51159.65 $ 20.00 150.00 300.00 50.00 ... 120.00 50.00 In addition to appearing often during the regular theatre sea sons in London, Gielgud has ap peared in America and played m repertory seasons. In 1945 he went to India and the Far East to entertain the troops as Ham-' let and as Charles Considine' in ‘‘Blithe Spirit.” His appearance here tomorrow marks the third program of the present Artists Series. interlandia Location Changed Interlandia will hold its folk dance at 7:30 tonight in 3 White instead of the HUB ballroom. \ | Belated Reminder | E - We have a E E Largo Selection E E of | Ted Heath LP’s | I at $2.50 | I SHADLE A3SOC. I ;= 151 S. Allen E niiimmmmiiimiimiimmmmmiE i return 1 to 4:30 om. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Faculty Session May Be Open To LA Officers A new plan to further student faculty cooperation in the Col lege -of the Liberal Arts would permit student council officers to attend liberal arts faculty meet ings. The idea was suggested to the council’s adviser by Richard C. Maloney, associate dean of the college. Maloney will bring the proposal before faculty members at a meeting Oct. 23. A $l5O scholarship will be awarded to a student in liberal arts this fall. The scholarship, one of two awarded every spring, was to go to Judith E. Thompson this year, but she has left school. The committee on scholarships will se lect another candidate for the award. Plans are being made, for the council’s annual Career Day to be held in early December. Three speakers will probably be en gaged for the program. Last year the program was cen tered around industry, banking and retailing. The University will give finan cial support to the program. 'Silver Whistle / McEnroe Comedy To Open Community Theatre Season By JEANETTE SAXE Four faculty members and four students are cast in the State College Community Theatre’s first major production, “The Sil ver Whistle,” a comedy by Robert McEnroe, to play at 8:15 tonight and tomorrow night in the State College Junior High School aud itorium The play shows lhe effects an outsider has oh the lives of the inhabitants of an old folks' home. The outsider is a young profes sor who masquerades as a tramp, Erwenter, to be able to get free s\: v Dr. Merritt A. Williamson Dean of College of Eng. and Arch. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER 414 West College Avenue Sunday, October 19th 6:30 P.M. The sphere above is a “core" for one kind of research atomie reactor. The metal tubes in the foreground and at the right show various test designs for holding the small uranium fuel pellets in other kinds of crtomic reactors. Strange new "tools" of atomic-electric power These are some of the strange new “tools” used to produce, test, or experiment with atomic-elec tric power. They are among the things that will help bring electricity from the atom. “Tools” like these are being used in develop ing several atomic-electric plants now under way. Electric light and power companies from many parts of the country are working with each Other and with equipment manufacturers and the Atomic Energy Commission to develop the plants. For more than 75 years, America’s independ ent electric light and power companies have pro duced more electricity than any other nation in the world. And they have helped develop ways to produce it more efficiently year after year. That’s why you can expect electric companies like this one to continue to do their part to ad vance the new science of producing electricity from the atom. fjyp WEST PENN POWER meals and lodging in the home. Under his influence, the old folks find a purpose in life and find they have’something to live for. Erwenter is played by Hyman Schultz, graduate student in chemistry. Harold Brown, grad uate student in rural sociology, plays Emmett, Erwenter’s side kick who tries to get him to leave the home. Sidney Bowhill, associate professor of elecirical engineer ing, plays Beebe and Lynn Christy, associate professor of English composition, plays Mr. (Continued on page eight) \\v si, LSA Presents Speaking on "MIRACLES" PAGE FIVE