PAO' NIGHT —Collegian Photo by Marty sale, FATHER GETS A SCOLDING—Jigee, (Louise Williams), a young girl, scolds her father (Hairy Jones) for his ill-treatment of Vir ginia (Pat Thompson), in the Players' production of "A Clearing in the Woods" by Arthur Laurents. The show will open in Schwab Auditonum tomorrow night, 'Clearing' Mental Sickness A mentally sick woman goes back to her summer house in a clearing in the woods to find what has caused her unhappiness in the Players' production of Arthur Laurents' "A Clearing in The Woods," which will open at 8 p.m. to morrow in Schwab Auditorium. The play will also run Fr While at her summer home, the heroine, Virginia, meets three Jigee, Nora and Ginna, who pie all similar to herself at var ous ages She also meets Hazel-; mae, her girlhood friend. Through' them she ielives some of her youthful experiences. Barney. her father, is lovable but adicied to the bottle and the golf course. Andy is her true love who returns to her and saves her sanity in the end. Pete is her ex-husband, a col lege BMOC who is very charm ing but Mile else. George is a composite of all the men with whom she has tried to find happiness. The Boy is her very first romance, who introduces her to spiked drinks. In this play, Laments has found a fanly new way to treat a neu rotic woman. It is not the medi cal neatment but the theatrical treatment He physically land scapes her troubled mind and puts into flesh her ugly memories. Flank Neusbaum, professor of theatie arts, will direct the pro duction, which requires very de tailed prcpaiation. Neusbaum had to find four actresses who resem bled each other slightly, one of whom had to be a girl of 10 or 12 to play Jigee The girl he found is Louise Williams, 10, from State College. She is in the fifth grade at the Nittany Avenue School Annex. This is her first time on stage. Neus b a um discovered her through Dr. Walter Walters' Creative Dramatics for Children Group last summer. Walters is head of the Department of Theatre Arts. Neusbaum is returning to stage direction after an absence of some years when he wac working with the Univeisity's MOttOn Picture Service. Sputnik 111 Will Appear To Campus Stargazers Area starganrs can watch Sputnik 111 pass over Centre County tonight. Sputnik 111 will be overhead at 7:30. It will be just west of the Zenith at 7:27 p m. Thursday. According to David C. Whit marsh, head of the Operation Moonwatch team, the Russian earth satellite is blinking at about 15-second intervals as It tumbles end over end. The satellite is still easily §ighte'd with the naked eye Concerns By JEANETTE SAXE day and Saturday. Tavern Group Asks for Laws The Pennsylvania Tavern As sociation will support state legis lation to provide for the prose cution of minors who enter tav erns instead of tavern licensees. Other legislative changes sup ported by the association include extending the closing time of taverns on Saturday from mid night to 2 a.m , permitting tav erns to sell liquor by the bottle after state stores are closed and 'allowing a larger discount on purchases from the state stores. The association also agreed to support legislation to permit the sale of a case of beer to take out, instead of the present limit of 12 bottles or cans, and to change the quota law so that the number of licenses granted will be de termined on a county basis in stead of the present community basis. Your choice of: 'Rubber Boots "Stadium Boots *Nylon Trimmed in Fur Is fashion . . , and fashion costs no more S. ALLEN ST. AD 8-8691 *tt.-,,-.. A, THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA International Students By PHYLLIS WESTCOTT 1 Foreign students contribute as much to the University as they receive, according to Dr. William H. Gray, director of 'international student affairs. 1 / 2 Price Boot Sale Juliet Room Gray Cites Contribution There are 234 international stu dents and guests, representing 40 countties, on campus this year. Thirty-four are members of the staff or faculty. More than half of the students are graduate stu dents. who are performing re search and manning the labora tones. The International Student Af fairs office, in 108 Willard, pro vides a place for them to bring their problems, academic and personal. The office is decorated with dis plays of gifts and the walls are hung with flags of the United Nations. Before a foreign student is ad mitteo to the University, he is screened by the Committee for Admission of International Stu dents. He must have $2200 to tide him over the year, and must ob tain a special passport visa, These students are usually the cream of the crop intellectually, and most of them are here on scholarships. Gray said. They are asked to bring musical instruments, costumes and curios with them which might be of in terest to the American people, The office encourages the stu dents to participate in normal campus activities, especially such organizations as the Inter- American Club and the Friends Science Prof Heads Seminar Dr. Hans Neuberger, professor and head of the department of meteorology, recently served as chairman of the General Session on Atmospheric Physics and a sub-seminar on atmospheric elec• tricity at the Users' Symposium 'held at the University of Michi gan, Ann Arbor, Mich. The symposium, sponsored joint ly by the University of Michigan and the Bendix Aviation Corpor ation Systems Division, was con cerned with the Air Force recon•d naissance system and the uses of atmospheric data by military and non-military researchers obtained from a four-engine Boeing jet air- 1 craft being equipped for recon- 1 naissance at 50,000 feet. Bootless Coeds: Welcome an Extra Chance to Save Regular Price $3.95 to $9.95 Sale Price $2.00 to OM of India. Many of them are asked to lecture by groups throughout the state. The Cosmopolitan Club puts out a monthly bulletin, the Cosmopd Gray feels that the international edited entirely by the internation- students contribute an air of uni al students. i versality to the campus. India, Another duty of the office is to with 35 students, tops the list of arrange invitations for the inter- , countries represented. There ale national students to spend holi-' 23 Chinese students, 18 Japanese, days, such as Thanksgiving and 14 English and 13 Canadians. Christmas, in the homes of Amen- Eight students are enrolled under can families, Anyone interested in the Hungarian Student Assistance having a foreign student _ visit, program. him should contact the office. I The College of Mineral Indus- The office grew out of the work tries, with 60 international stu of the Committee of International dents, enrolls the largest number. Understanding in 1953. I Approximately 37 are in the Col- Ten years ago there were 57 !lege of Agriculture, and the same foreign students on campus. i number in Chemistry and Physics. However, the University only Twenty-four are studying engi ranks seventeenth in number of neering and architecture. The bra that does more for you RAVE T'by orm Your bra conforms to the shape of your body, thanks to the elastic band around the cup of Rave. This means snug, figure-shaping fit in complete comfort because the elastic clings yet gives and moves when you move. And of course the circle-stitched cups provide another im portant plus—give uplift and a prettier line. Rave No. 589 in ma- $395 chine washable white cotton broad cloth. 32A to 38C. All these- other important features, too . . . • Elastic stitching under cup for flexible fit! • Extra low-cut underarm for freedom of movement! • Extra tow-cut back for fashion and firm anchorage! • All elastic back for breathing, moving comfort! State College - Bellefonte ' =I!IMINIIIEWDEM WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1958 International students. Foreign students at the University of Michigan, for instance, number several thousand. MIIMMIMMMOTEI