TUESDAY, NOVEMBE Six-Week Summ Speci To B By DENNY MA The two 6-wee sessions to be adde will be geared for uate students who N I celerate, a ccordi Palmer C. Weaver, de mer Sessions The University is two sessions to its r mer program of a 6 session and three wee post-sessions "This is one of t make the University and resources avails public during the order to take care of ing demand for hig er educa tion facilities," Wea er said. The summer sesslo will begin next June 8. The f rst 6-week period will end July 7. The sec ond session will be f m July 20 to Aug. 28. The first session of the regular summer program, the inter-ses-' sion, will last from June 8 to 26. The mid-session will be from June 29 to Aug. 8. This session was previously kndwn as the main session, Weaver said, but the name was changed because there will actually be three main or 6-week periods next summer. "Therefore there will be five separate sessions running con currently," he said, "and there will be special course offerings to accompany the change." Weaver pointed out that many Ted Follows: Canadian Player Values Experience By 80881 LEVINE Ted Follows, featured actor with the Canadian Players, doesn't believe in studying drama in college. Follows,, who majored in psychology at the University of Toronto, clarified his rather startling statement by Adding that he did not believe in taking drama courses for credit, but he did recommend theatre students to act in as many school produc tions as possible. "I think schools can give you a background," he said. "But I think ytm can learn more by. get ting up and' acting—with actors better than you are. "You can learn only a certain amount by sitting around watch ing other people. I think you can learn best by doing it yourself." Follows studied in New York with Hobert Berghoff and Uta Hagen after his graduation from college. He feels it was there that he developed his technique. Mrs. Ted Follows, nee Dawn Greenhalgh, began acting while in high school in Montreal. Rosa lind, in "As You Like It," was only ; her third encounter with FOR YOUR BEST GIRL LEATHER G factory pric contact . Ala P.O. Box 355 . State 18, 1958 r Sessions I Courses Offered employers are more concerned now with breadth and depth of undergraduate requirements. He suggested that students take elec tives in summer school together with required subjects to widen their backgrounds. "In accordance with this," he said, "the University is making available this enlarged summer program to give undergraduates a chance to enrich and strengthen their training oven and beyond the mere curriculum require ments. It will make them better prepared to meet the new and higher qualifications of industry." Many of the courses for under graduates in the 3-6-3 program will be scheduled for the 6-6 sum mer sessions, Weaver said. With the 6-6 program, under graduates will be able to take courses right through the sum mer with more continuity, he said, adding that it will also help those who have jobs part of the summer. Whereas the 6-6 sessions will ;be geared to undergraduates, Weaver said, the 3-6-3 periods will be devoted more to graduate students. But he emphasized that grauate work will be carried in the 6-6 program and undergrad uate courses in the 3-6-3 setup. The graduate work in the 3-6-3 sessions will be especially ,planned for teachers, school ad iministrators and in-service grad uate students, he said. summer next year ndergrad ish to ac n g to Dr. 1 n of Sum- adding the gular sum week mid ; inter- and 'e steps to s facilities '.le to the ummer in increas- Shakespeare, and her first major Follows has .done 150 different Shakespearean role. plays in his career. She was born in China and was evacuated 'to Canada when the Communists took over the gov ernment. Before joining the Play ers she had experience in radio and television work. "I think Rosalind is certainly the most demanding part I've ever done and one of the largest female parts ever written," she said. She continued that Shakes peare's plays are harder to read in this day and age because a lot of his dialogue dealt with subjects of the time. She said a lot of his lines have lost their topical value, and subtitles that weer understood in Shakespeare's day are not understood by aud iences today. Mrs. Followi said she found that in some respects his come , dies are easier to do than his tragedies. When the troupe heads for their next engagement at the Library of Congress Theatre in Washington, D.C., they will be doing "As You Like again. ODES 1 - Moses College 109 S. Alien St. AD 8-8691 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 20% Store-wide Sale Many Curient Styles Shoes -- Handbags Cocktail Dresses Grad School Will Present Davis Lecture Dr. W. Allison Davis, educator and social psychologist, will pre sent the second talk in the Grad uate School Lecture Series at 8 tonight in 121 Sparks. His lecture, co-sponsored by the Colleges of Education and Home Economics will be on the subject, "Ego Development in Adolescence and Young Adulthood." Davis, who is professor of edu cation at the University of , Chi cago, began his career in the field of education in 1925 at the Hamp ton Institute in Hampton, Vir ginia. He served two years as a fel low in anthropology at the Grad uate Business School at Harvard and...then five years as professor of anthropology at Dillard Uni versity in New Orleans. He was guest lecturer in human relations at Yale in 1939 and from 1940 to 1942 was a staff member of the diviiion of child develop ment, Commission of 'Teacher Education, American Council of Education. Davis is a graduate of Williams College where he was valedic torian of his class. He holds a master of arts degree from Har vard and a doctor of philosophy degree from the University of Chicago. In 1940 he wrote, with John Dollard, the book, "Children of Bondage," a case study of eight Negro adolescents in the South and in the following year he worked with 8.8. and M. R. Gard ner in writing "Deep South," an account of the interaction of life patterns between the Negro and white races. "In the last four years," he said, "I have done only Shaw and Shakespeare with the excep tion of "The Moon Is Blue" which I played for .two weeks. I think it makes modern plays so much easier to do when you have a good background of these." Although they have been tour ing together for two years, this is the first tour the Follows are aet 4 ' , ct as man and wife. "On this tour we're working at getting along together," he said. "I think this is probably a lot easier than being at home," she said. "At home I'm expected to rehearse all day and then fix the din n e r and take care of the house," Juliet Room Reluctant Debutante Will Open Friday An ambitious mother, Sheila Broadbent, conducts a search for the "right" man for her daughter, Jane, in the Players' production of William Douglas Home's comedy, "The Reluc tant Debutante," which opens at 8 p.m. Friday at Center Stage in the Extension Conference Center. "The Reluctant Debutante" is the second Players' production of the year in arena style. It will play Fridays and Saturdays, when the University is in ses sion, until its closing performance on Jan. 10. It will be directed by Robert Reifsneider, associate pro fessor of theatre arts. Jane, the reluctant 'debutante, has a firm idea of the type of man she wants for a partner but this doesn't stop Sheila who prowls through the London telephone book in quest of a faultless male trophy. In writing his plays, Home re jects the blase approach to humor and picks up the molehill incon gruities, the inescapably comic elements, in the hu rn a n land scape. The prelude for "The Reluc tant Debutante" could - have been played at Oxford, which Home deserted regularly to go to the London dances. He would return at daybreak and ^ • •..* By JEANETTE SAXE climb sheer walls to get to his room. In "Half-Term Report," his au tobiography, Homes writes, "In later years I have sometimes looked around at the staid, royal ty-studded ballroom and won dered just how many of the sleek, impeccable young men, dancing attendance to a crowd of downy debutantes, would in a few hours be hanging by their evening bra ces from the spiky walls of Eng land's leading universities." WHY GET WET? Call Us at the Nittany Dell "Home of Delicious Sandwiches" AD 8-8502 eI . II *. ..., s 'io c ~ '.; **.; It ' ' v',i '' MEET ME IER THE CLOCK T ?kends and the holidays are so much more fun in •A lew York if you stop at 3 iltmore, traditional favorite ?very campus in the )entry! Economical, too. to our College Department special student and faculty rates and reservations.' BILTMORE rn Avenue at 43rd St., N. Y. 17, N. Y. AT GRAND CENTRAL STATION HOTELS—The Barclay & Park Lane -ry M. Anholt, President PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers