PAGE TWO 1100 Tickets Left For 'Tempest' Distribution of student tickets for two of the three per formances by the Shakespeare Festival Players began yes terda at the Hetzel Union desk. "The Tempest" will be pet at 2.30 p.m. Saturday in Sell% 'Joey' Pions Make Little Progress Plans for Project Joey,' a plan to hold a Christmas party for 40 orphans in the Nittany area, made little progress at last night's Nittany Council meeting. In the only motion passed at the meeting, it was decided that the individual hall linits would donate money only to finance a party which each unit will hold for two orphans. The money to finance the bring ing of the orphans and a gala patty for all the orphans in the area's Nittany Union Building, a maximum of $450, will come from the Council's $2320 carry over for next year. Previously all the money for the project was to -have come from donations from each Nit tany hall unit, but many units opposed this because of the un used $2320. The party will be held Sunday Dec. 13, but so far no definite plans have been set as to which orphanage to invite, or exactly what will be done to entertain them when they arrive. Units 28, 36, and 39 have con sented to decorate the NUB for the parts. flans have also been completed for a Nittiny area Judicial Board of Review, to be known as JBR. Selected to participate on the Board were Samuel Freeman, Christopher Brown, Robert Slat er, William Tanski, Charles Star buck, and Charles Funk The chair man h, George McComb. The committee will meet every Sunday and handle judicial mat leis in the area. Seniors Attend Policy Forum Harald Sandstrom and Rodger Klein, seniors in arts and letters from Bryn Athyn, have been selected to represent the Univer sity at the 11th annual Student Conference on United Stales Af fan 'the conference, to be held Wednesday through Saturday at the United States Military Aca demy, will discuss foreign assist aneo as an instrument of security. Sind trom and Klein will par ticmate in the economic and tech nical roundtable. ‘-zand,trom was also selected to sit on the "New Yot k Times Youth Forum" to be televised by WIICIA at 12 30 Sunday. He will be one of four panel member , chost•n limn the 220 students at tending the conference. --The State College Borough accident iccord for Jan. 1 to Oct 31, 1959, shows that of 23.1 acci dents. only six were due to mech anical defects in vehicles. oftday Sit opper3 ist ()rift le Dinners Priced from $1.25 Return Taxi Fare Gratis Open Daily 5-9 Sun. 12-8 p.m Call AD 8.0082 For Reservations eto‘Jter —llottJe THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA ormed at 8.30 p.m. Friday and ab Auditorium. Four hundred and 700 student tickets remain for each performance, respective• ly. Non-student tickets for those 'two performances will go on sate at 9 a.m. today. "Measure for Measure" will be' presented at 8:30 pm. Saturday.i Distribution of student tickets fort this performance will begin at. 9 a m. tomorrow_ and sale of non-i student tickets will begin at 9' a.m. Thursday. Arnold Moss, one of Ameri ca's foremost Shakespearean ac tors, will take the leading male roles in both plays, Moss has had a varied and colorful career. He has worked as a manager and director as well as an ac tor. He has appeared on the stage, radio and television, and has presented narrations with leading symphonies. , Both plays to be given here are : comedies. "Measure for Measure" is a story on the use and abuse of power in high places and it en hances the foibles of human na ture. "The Tempest" tells of ene mies reunited on a magic island and combines enchantment with humor. The Shakespeare Festival Play ers are a company of American actors. They present the plays in a novel manner, using few props and no elaborate costumes. Moss, who planned the staging, feels that the simple and uncom plicated technique leaves more room for the audience to partici pate by using their imaginations. By illuminating the dialogue and the movements of the actors, the plot is easy for the theater-goers to follow. Chess Tourney Scheduled Here The National Intercollegiate Chess Championship, which will attract more than 30 of the top college student chess players in the countiy. will be held Dec 28 to 30 at the University. The competition, which will be conducted as a 6-round Swiss tournament. is sponsored by the Intercollegiate Chess League of America, the United States Chess Federation and the University Chess Club, the host This: year the competition will be a tournament for individuals in accordance with a policy that provides for team competition and individual competition in alter nate years Richard C Sommerville, a soph omore iii meteorology from Alex andria. Va is president of the Penn State Chess Club which is now completing arrangements for the tout nament For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5-2531 Can YOU Guess the Mystery Prof? Listen For Clues On "Groovology 54" at 10:05 WMAJ -- 1450 Hail to the Real Lion, May He Rest in Peace By JIM MORAN CENTRAL PARK, N.Y. Remember the letter to the editor and the ensuing story disclosing that Penn State owned a real lion? I Well, he's dead. John Galm, director of the Cen tral Park Zoo, told the Daily Col legian that the lion presented to the University in 1943 by a net work radio program, had to be destroyed. Cause: rickets. Galm said he had no avail able records on the lion, but he remembers him well. "We had to destroy the little fel low in 1947," he said, "because his legs were crooked and he walked with a limp, since his front legs were shorter than his hind ones. We had several com Swezey's Talk Keynotes Forum for Broadcasters No nation can afford to have its communications facilities controlled by people who do not have the time to think nor the wisdom to see the abso planning, Robert D. Swezey, general manager of WDSU Broad casting Corporation, New Orleans, La., said Sunday. Keynoting the opening session of the University's Communica tions Forum for Broadcasters. Swezey said one of the matters of concern to broadcasting is that the public is not really getting the information it needs to fully ap preciate the significance of cur rent happenings. The topic of the forum, spon sored by the School of Journal ism and the Center for Countin uing Liberal Education, is "Broad casting: The Challenge of Re sponsibility." The forum will con rtinue through this evening. The broadcaster today is lim ited in scone and program se lection by the economic link be tween the industry and adver tising, Swezey said. "Too often the broadcaster is required to think largely in commercial terms in order to survive," he said. The primary responsibility of broadcasting today is its obliga tion to defend freedom of cneech on the air, Swezey said. This is allied with the responsibility of the industry to encourage intel lectual leadership in order to sti mulate the "apparent listlessness of the people on crucial matters." Swezey said he believes that the people are confused and that there IS a real need for leadership Players Present IBSEN John Gabriel Borkman "John Gabriel Borkman is a man of the most energ et i c imagination whose illusions feed on his misfortunes an d whose conception of his own power grows hyper bolical and Mapoleonic on his solitude and his importance." (enter Stage Dec. 4 - Jan. 16 plaints from visitors that he didn't look too good." Galm said the lion, or leo par dis, his scientific name, was a runt and never developed fully. The lion was given to the Uni versity by "Vox Pop," a wartime radio program starring Warren Hull and Parks Johnson. The 6-week old cub was on campus for one week, under the care of a University veterinar ian. Keeping the lion here was impractical, so it was sent back to the Central Park Zoo. The cub had a taste of national fame when he was photographed nestled in he paws of the Nittany Lion statue near Beaver Field. The picture was transmitted coast-to-coast by The Associated Press. Galm explained that rickets stems from a lack of calcium in an animal's early diet ute necessity for thoughtful executive vice president and spiritual, social and political.' Americans, he said, have not lost any of the stamina or basic ideals which have been part of our heri tage. "Editorial activity is the force which can raise the prestige and Istatus of broadcasting. It becomes a force to be reckoned with; a personality with views and opin ions. If properly conducted, edi torializing becomes one of the most constructive and gratifying services a station can render." Dean Speaks at Exposition Dean Merritt A. Wii.liarnson, of the College of Engineering and Architecture, was guest speaker at a luncheon at the 7th Annual In dustrial Electrical Exposition in Pittsburgh, Shaw '=""43„ Miss 011ie Reber, Tri Delt Because of the short time left and the few openings available, we urge those of you who need Christmas portraits to make your appointments now. Call ADams 7.4454 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1459 Frosh Tea to Feature Golden Holiday Theme "A Golden Holiday" will be the theme of the freshman tea from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday. The tea is in honor of all upper class women who will each be sent an invitation. Members of the Freshman Council will act as hostesses for the event. *CATHAIJM Now: 1:30, 3:31, 5:32, 7:33, 9:34 HAL WAWS' PROZIN "career WAN * FRANCIOSA NAME * JONES A evwft.ent Rehm.* NITTANY IN N al v ittlE B W'S "THE SEVENTH SEAL" BEGINS WEDNESDAY 2011' Century•Foic pmeento , • it oNEmAscops Eva Marie Saint Don Murray