JING PLANS .. \vs the costume iigns. Miss Trenu. eluctant Debutant remedied Designs Dresses for Players By JEANNETTE SAXE Mary Jane Tremellen, senior in! dress design (the College of the; Liberal Arts) from Lancaster, has| had a chance to see her designs; actually produced here on cam pus Miss Tremellen designed most of the dresses for the Players’ production of William Douglas Home’s “The Reluctant Debu tant.” Besides doing the actual designing, -she chose the material for the dresses and supervised the crews who made them. She also made the plans for remodel ing other clothes for the play. She was given a budget and had to stay within it. This in cluded the cost for the renting and cleaning of some of the cos tumes. Russell Whaley, assistant pro fessor of theatre aits, who usual ly designs the costumes for the Players’ productions, said he ask-j ed Miss Tremellen to do them for this play because she “has the interest and ability to do the de signing.” Whaley said this is the PENNSHIRE “Collegian Photo by Marty Sch for Players' costumes, Mary Jane Tremelten ager Shirley Zampelli some of the final designed the costumes for the production first lime in at least five years that a student has done this for a regular Players’ production. When asked how she felt about doing the designing, Miss Trem ellen said: ‘'lt’s the first time I’ve ever seen my designs actual ly produced. It’s good experience! and I enjoyed it very much.” She said she has no definite plans for after graduation this month except that she would like to go to Boston and design dresses for a factory or illus trate fashions for a newspaper. Eventually, s'ne plans to attend Parsons Art School in New York City and major in fashion designing. She is a member of Players and has bepn costume manager for several productions. She is also a member of Newman Club and Pi Gamma Alpha, art honor so ciety. ‘‘The Reluctant Debutante” will play at 8 p m. Friday and Satur day at Center Stage in the Exten sion Conference Center. The pro duction will close Saturday. .LEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Artist Shows Involve Many Problems By KATIE DAVIS [ which is difficult because Sch- Com ert-Opeia Group intends to “Ther™ are tremendous' wab is a,wa " s tied u-P and the 'do the muse nrnhlem* involved in nlnnnmo , !he or f c f h f tra ofien ! “It is much haider to accom ptODlems imolved in planning have to get lime off from ctass- pany Mngols ra ther than instru a performance of an Artists," —-— ; inentahsts." he added, “and the q • . , j , . 1 Two hundred and fifty stu- ‘orchestra membeis must be able oeiies guest ana a Student, dent tickets were distributed jto adiust themselves-to an on organization such as the (Jni- 1 yesterday for the C oncer t- tirelv diffeient wav of playing „ , , „! Opera Group's performance to the music if the Concert-Opeta versily Symphony Orchestra. . he held Tuesday night. Seven Group wants them to” Theodore K. Karhan, associate’ hundred and fifty tickets are i K ar han pointed out that Mo piofessor of music and music edu-j i?ft. General distribution of i zart j s very difficult to play cation, said. i tickets will begin today. Stu- ' an£ j demands exact and fine in- The University Symphony Or-! dents and faculty members are terpretation. Mozart also wrote chestra will accompany the Con-j reminded ihat they will need . m usic for instruments in keys cert-Opera Group in a perform-! tickets to attend the open re- 1 that are not used any more. Or ance of Mozart’s “Cosi Fan Tutti”j hearsal Monday night, too. j chestra members and especially (“Women Are Like That”) soiled- the woodwinds are constantly uled for 8:30 p.m, next Tuesday.' es for the rehearsals," Karhan transposing music for this per- The orchestra and the Concert-! said. j formance. Opera Group will have an open l Karhan said the orchestra has The orchestra wilt plav with rehearsal together at 8:30 pm. been practicing all semester for the Artists Senes group Monday Monday. I this joint performance with thejatternoon, at an open rehearsal "First we must schedule re- !Concert-Opera Gioup hut still Monday night and at tiie final hearsals in Schwab Auditorium have no insurance of how the 1 performance Tuesday night Intellectual (Continued from page seven) jpose of a university should be just! Roy Estes, vice president for covered with frankly pornograph-.the opposite: to make us mtellec-' ma y' lse , ting °f U.S. Steel Coip., ic magazines, but we cannot legal-jtually mature, knowledgeable, so- j t the Markcting'co,!- ly buy an unexpurgated copy ofiphisticated and disdainful of trash!vocation at 3:10 p.m. Tuesday in D. H. Lawrence’s serious noyell mediocrity. There are encour-! the Hetzel Union Building. “Lady Chatterlev’s Lover” the! ag ' ng s ‘ gns that Penn State now, The lecture is open to the pub- , ...... irealizes this more clearly thamlic. puipose of censorship being to ever before: in the years imme-; Estes is a graduate of Harvard protect not our moral but ourdiately ahead it has unprecedent-:College and Harvard Business intellectual innocence. The purged possibilities of greatness, 'School. Our roots go deep in the growing areas served by Americas second largest telephone system (general) VmTM/ GENERAL TELEPHONE Courage ~ America is building big out where the grass roots grow. New industries, new businesses, and new homes are springing up where there's elbowroom. And these are the areas where General Telephone is a citizen of long standing. From a small beginning, Gen Tel has grown with the countryside. Today our 1,745 exchanges in 30 states provide modern service for 3,359,000 telephones. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers