PAUL . t)(7H I Players to Present ; iGrads Live i • • s i Former cl leaning • in w oo d , By JEANETTE AXE Coed Dorm Authur Laurents' "A Clearing in The Woods," to be pre- I I After 69 years, a woman's dorm sented by Players on Dec. 4, 5 and 6, is an intimate excursion itory, Woman's Building, has been ;remodeled to house graduate stu- Jnto a woman's mind that clearly shows a person cannot dents and has been renamed the !Graduate Residence Hall. The run away from his past. !change from housing coeds to The heroine, Virginia, is a sick woman—mentally dis—houing graduate students went traught, profoundly unhappy. In finto effect this semester. ; a process of self analysis, she i‘d Graduate Residence Hall, which l ; was once called Ladies' Cottage,; forced by her past to go back • • ' first hall through her life and try to find; at as the the University. residence Formerly, built all the time, place and event which'students lived in Old Main, but caused her unhappiness. She de ;as the enrollment increased it ;became necessary to build a resi dence hall. home in a clearing in the woodsy In order to build Ladies' Cot to try and discover where she! fage it was essential to move went wrong. • the home of Professor Jackson. • The collage, which was corn- While there, she meets three plated in 1889, cost $2534.42 for girls—Jigee, 10; Nora, a teen- j which appropriations were ager: and Ginna, a young wom- made by the executive commit an—who are all similar to her- i tee. self. Through them she relives In 1909 the west wing was add some of her youthful experi- ed to the cottage. ences. She again meets the boy According to the Sept. 26, ! who is her very first love and 1907,, issue of the State Collegian: who introduces her to her first I the girls of Ladies' Cottage had t spiked drink. She relives the I o abide by the following rules time when she is married to (the rules were found by a mem- Pete, a college BMOC who is .ber of the Collegian staff): very charming but little else. ' "No one is permitted off the In time, she divorces Pete. • campus with a male. She also encounters her fath-' "The governess shall be inform er, Barney, and some of the oth-ied when a man has asked to cal, er men in her life. Barney is a and the necessary permission loveable person but addicted to; sought. " the bottle and golf course. Andy is Sunday night callers must be her true love who returns to bailout to the willow by 9:30 under and saves her sanity. George is a; the pain of an interview with the composite of all the other men governess Friday and Saturday with whom she has tried to find calls may be prolonged until 9:45. happiness. She ako meets Hazel "Girl students may not work in i ,the library at night without per mile, a girlhood friend mission. If any subject in the In the end she realizes that it course ml j'equires r; night - attendance, is hope and not hopelessness the subject should be dropped. which is the wellspring of life. "A tinkling bell should an- ' • Frank Neusbaum, professor of nounce to the students at La theatre arts, will direct the play. dies Cottage when to begin He is returning to stage direc- studying, when to stop, and Sion after an absence of some when to retire. The last bell years when he was working ; shall ring at 10. with the University's motion ; "A college student who wishes picture service. to treat a coed to a sundae will The production of "A Clearing; be required to hand his nickel to in The Woods" requires very de-; the maiden' at the corner and he tailed preparation. Neusbaum had;may wait until her return to re to meet the problem of finding; ceive words of appreciation and lour actresses who resembled onel thanks. another slightly. The casting was "Special provision will have to complicated by the fact that one be made as to the color of necktie, of the actresses has to portray a the style of collar, size of shoes small girl of 10. Setting, lights; and the religious and political i and sound are also especially ra-!preferences which a caller should portant in this play. ;be required to possess." AKPsi• Initiates BusAd Prof, 26 Students Alpha kappa Psi, professional commerce and business fraternity, has initiated 27 new members. The new members of the Gam ma Epsilon chapter of Alpha Kap pa Psi are: John N! Yanouzas, commerce instructor of the Col lege of Business Administration faculty: Joseph Giusti, James Krum, Robert Loekard, Lawrence Strickland and John Willingham, graduate students. Undergraduate initiates are Thomas Baker, Thomas Bei ta, Roger Bowers, Robert Farber, Roy Fuhrman, Allan Gurnmo, Thomas Ilavrilesdy, Charles Honeywell, Thomas Kaschak, John Kerr, Wit ham Kuhnsman, Blaine Minim nick, Ronald Novak, Miles Pettis ky, Paul Pifer, Andrew Postmeks Morris Bambo, Francis Hood, Ja cob Segal, Richard Snyder and Haydn Thomas. Chapter President Richard Trudgen, James Chapple, Jay Waterman and William Graham v ill represent the University chapter at the Northeastern Coo fel enc.(' of Alpha Kappa Psi to b; , held horn Thursday to Saturday at Ea,t Orange, N J. Lehrman to Discuss Pasternak's 'Zhivago' The Nobel Pi ire winning novel, "Dot tor Zluvago," will be dis ei,sed by Dr Edgar H. Lehrman. professor of Russian. at the Founders' Day Dinner of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society, at 6 30 p.m. Dec. 4, at the Autoport. For dinner reservations, con tact Dr. Aileen llostinsky, asso ciate professor of mathematics. In State College Your Headquarters For Quality Laundry & Dry Cleaning Service PENN STATE LAUNDRY and CLEANERS 301 W. Beaver Ave. 3-Hour LAUNDRY SERVICE FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE lilt year LLMIttiJAN,• JIAI r. LULLIEtie, FtNNSYLVANIA Phone i'..tD 7-7629 Through Traffic Banned in Terrace The streets of Eastview Ter-! Two sophomores in physical ed race, faculty housing develop-lucation from Philadelphia plead ment located behind the old Pol-I d'e guilty yesterday before Justice lock residence area, have been' closed to through traffic. of the Peace Guy Mills, on a dis- Only persons having business)orderly conduct charge. in the area will be allowed tol Dennis Johnson Jr. and Robert drive on the streets. ißrown were fine d $13.50 and Elwood F. Olver, director of thelhearing costs for creating a nuis- Department of Security, said thP i ance in the downtown diner and traffic in the area has increased , on local streets early Sunday between College Avenue and En-'morning. trance Road and is endangeringi They said that they had been the lives of the children playing 'drinking earlier in the evening. in the area. Mills said that since they gave The problem has increased since police no trouble he only charged construction of the area started, them a minimum fine. THE CLOTHES YOU SAVE MAY BE YOUR OWN In this column we take up fashions for college men, which means of course, the Ivy Look. Today's Ivy Look clothes have made a great stride forward. Not only do they have thin lapels, three but tons, narrow trousers, and a minimum of shoulder padding, hut —now hear this ! this year they are actually mend with ivy! This new development, while attractive beyond the singing of it, nevertheless gives rise to certain hazards. For instance, people keep trying to plant you on Arbor Day. Indeed, this is precisely what happened to two SAE's of my acquaintance, Walter R. Gurlash and Fred Rasp. Before they could protest, they were snatched up, planted, limed, and watered, and today they support a hammock in Cut and Shoot, Vermont. Let us now discuss shirts. Again this year the campus favorite is the good old Oxford with button-down collar and barrel cuffs. This is without doubt an admirable garment, but let me ask you a question: if you don't wear anything but Oxfords, what do you do with all the cuff links people have been giving you for your birthday since you were twelve years old? Well sir, some fellows have their wrists pierced, but what E. Mackenzie Sigafoos, a Chi Psi of my acquaintance, did was to take a dozen pairs of his handsome gold monogrammed cuff links and string them together in a charm bracelet for his girl, Jo-Carol Isobar. (It turned out, incidentally, to be a mistake. In short order so many admirers accrued to Jo-Carol on account of her gor geous bracelet that she grew tired of plain old E. Mackenzie, and one night when she was seated on a bench in Lovers Lane throwing sticks for E. Mackenzie to retrieve, she suddenly, cruelly, without warning, told him they were through. "I am heartbroken," said E. Mackenzie, heartbroken. "But if go you must, give me back my charm bracelet." "No, I will keep it," said Jo-Carol "What for?" said E. Mackenzie. "You can't wear it. The initials on the cuff links are all mine—E.M.S." "Ha, ha, the joke is on you," said Jo-Carol. "Yesterday I was voted Miss Chinese Restaurant of 1958." "So?" said E. Mackenzie "So," replied Jo-Carol, "E.M.S. does not stand for E. Mac kenzie Sigafoos. It stands for Eat More Subgtini!" A broken man, E. Mackenzie today squeezes out a meagre living as a pendulum in Cleveland. Jo-Carol w•as killed in a tong w•ar.) But I digress. We were talking about well-dressed men, and the one essential for every well-dressed man—and every well-dressed woman too—is a well-dressed cigarette—neat, compact, flavor ful, and correct for work or play, sunshine or shower, repose or revelry, darkness or light. And where does one find such a per fect companion? Just go to any tobacco counter and ask for Philip Morris. Ask for it in long size or regular. Ask for it in soft pack or hard. But ask for it; that's the important thing. Don't just stand there making cryptic gestures at your tobac conist. He may be armed. C 1966 Mai Shulman Those of you who favor filters, try a filter that will favor you—Marlboro, made by the makers of nulls Morris, icha bring you this column throughout,the school year. HASDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1958 Disorderly Sophs Given 13.50 Fine OR. - :i...:::; . . - .1- . '. : 1:•(-• mtc`'it Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers