TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1960 Students Write Pia s Five O'Clock Play Group Opens New Productions The Five O'Clock Theater will again be open to students for tryouts this semester for parts in their productions. The plays to be used will be written by members of the play-writing class under the direction of Warren S. Smith, associate professor of theatre arts. Last semester the productions were presented by mem- All Activties Will Report To ASA The Senate Committee on Student Affairs has asked all organizations to turn in data to the office of Associated Stu dent Activities by Feb. 28. The following data should be re ported: •A list of officers, advisers, and committee chairmen. •The organization's constitu tion and bylaws. •The number of members and the number• of meetings held in the past academic year. • The committee has also request ed that a complete membership list can be obtained at any time' it is called for, and that the in-I formation requested above bel brought up-to-date at the be-. ginning of each semester. The committee also requires that the necessary arrangements be made to have the organiza tion's financial records submitted to ASA or the University Audit ing Department. In the latter case, the Auditing Department will submit a report of the organi zation's finances to the ASA an nually. Any organization which has not given the proper information to the ASA will be considered de funct and its charter may be re voked, according to William F. Fuller, manager of the ASA. Dusinberre Attends Meeting George M. Dusinberre, profes sor of mechanical engineering, at tended a meeting of the American Committee for the 1961 Interna tional Heat Transfer Conference. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA bers of acting and'play directing classes with Kelly Yeaton, asso ciate professor of theatre arts, teaching. This semester, the productions will be staged by volunteer di rectors who will hold try-outs for parts, and, therefore, the acting, directing and, technical work will be done by people in terested in experimental pro ductions of original one-act plays, Judson Sonderson, assis tant manager of the Five 0% Clock Theatre, said. "The Return," written by Janet Durstme, senior in journalism from Ellwood City, will be the Five O'Clock Theatre's first pro duction of the semester. It will be presented this after noon in the Little Theater in the basement of Old Main. "The Return" is a play about a young man who returns to the town of his youth in search of an old love. Joel Daniels, senior in arts and' letters from Buffalo, N.Y., will play the part of the young man,' and Cypher, sophomore in the di vision of counseling from Pitts burgh, will play opposite him. Arlene Muller, graduate student in speech from Ellenville, N.Y., .will play the part of the mother. Rodney Busch is the director of the play, and Roxanne Walton is stage manager. David McGirr is lin charge of lighting and sets and (Vincent Scasselllati is in charge ,of costumes. Harvard Professor To Speak Tonight Dr. Paul C. Mangelsdorf, pro fessor of botany at Harvard Uni versity, will speak at S tonight in 119 Osmond Laboratory on "Origin and Evolution of Corn." His lecture, which is open to the public, is spon , ored by Sigma Xi, botanical society. angelsdorf serves also as di rector of the Botanical Museum and chairman of research in ex perimental and applied botany at Harvard. Chess Team Wins Match With Navy The University's Chess Team, undefeated thus far, won 3-1 in a match with the United States Naval Academy Sunday at Annapolis, Md. The team won on the one, three and five boards. Members of the team who took, part in the event were Anthony Cantone, junior in aeronautical, engineering from Philadelphia; Richard Somerville, sophomore in meteorology from Alexandria, Va.; Fred Shaffer, senior in phys ics from Somerset; Eugene Gru mer, junior in fuel technology from Pittsburgh; and Harry 'Mathews, junior in electrical en gineering from Ligonier. The Chess Club will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Hetzel Union cardroom. Starting tomor row, the club will hold 10-round round-robin tournaments Eleven people will take part in the tour naments; the matches will con tinue for 11 weeks. On Feb. 24 the club will begin ' conducting 5-round tournament:, 'among the remaining members of !the club. New members can join 'at any of these meetings Mark Dollard (center) discusses an impending customer service problem with two of his supervisors. In Mark Dollard's progress story Maik C. Dollard earned his B.A. degree in English from Yale University in June, 1955. lie joined the New York Telephone Company the following July 18th. Three and a half years later, he became a Dis trict Manager for the company in New York City—with a staff of 37 people re porting to him and responsibility for 49,000 customer accounts. Mark's choice of a telephone cmeer came after numerous job interviews in a variety of business fields. "What sold me," he says, "was the telephone - company's repu tation for solid managerial training, sta bility and growth. And I was impressed by the high caliber of people I met during my visit to the company." And those are the things to which Mark credits his rapid advancement. His train big during his fist two )eats covered a wide range of activities ... including the handling of customer contacts in the business office, selling communications . - BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES - A 490. i i I t I A L A Prof Analyzes Plants For Dr. Maurice Shamma, assistant professor of chemistry, is continu ing his study of plants to deter mine valuable compounds they may contain. The study is supported by a 3-year grant of $13,500 from the National Science Foundation. A Campus-to-Career Case History There's a message for you Costly Compounds in his study, Shamma is ana lyzing plants found in Pennsyl vania and also in other parts o the country. He is looking pri marily for alkaloids and trying t i determine the structure of an such base - he finds. services to businessmen and supervising a business office. "It I% as the company's vigorous gt ow th that created the opportunity for me to be come District Manager in January,l9s9," Matk points,but. "What I like most about my present posi tion is the variety of managerial responsi bilities I have," lie says. "It's interesting, stimulating work. I deal with sales and marketing programs, handle personnel problems and make a lot of public rela tions contacts." The message for sou? Stability, growth, systematic training and genuine athance. mcnt opportunities all add up to rewarding careers with the Bell Telephone Companies. Be sure to look into the opportunities for you. Talk with the Bell intemiewcr ashen he omits sour campus—and read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in sour Place ment Office. You'll like what you learn. PAGE FIV 1 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers