FRIDAY. MARCH 18. 1960 Experts to Speak wsman's Seminar Labor At N< experts in labor-management problems will lvania newsmen at the 10th Annual News to be held April 1 and 2 at the Nittany Lion A galaxy of address Pennsy man’s Seminar Inn. ip to 75 newsmen have been reserved for two Spaces for t days of talks an “Labor, Managem lie.” The seminar the Pennsylvania paper Editors, t Newspaper Public and the Univer Journalism. 1 discussions on ent and the Pub is sponsored by Society of News le Pennsylvania hers’ Association iity’s School of ire Edward J. tor of the Scran lugene Goodwin, 'hool of Journal- Co-chairmen Donohoe, city edi ton Times, and I director of the Si ism. isiraiion Thurs- Following rei le first session. day night, in scheduled for Friday morning, Dr. Joseph Ra rback. head of the Department of Labor Educa tion, will speak m "Background of Labor-Management Prob lems in the U.S." and Charles T. Douds, director of the Penn sylvania Bureau of Mediation, will discuss "State and Federal Labor Law." The Friday afternoon session will include a panel discussion on “Wages, Prices and Inflation.” The panelists will include Stanley H. Ruttenberg, director of the De partment of Research, AFL-CIO, and George P. Hitchings, manager of the Economic Analysis De partment of the Ford Motor Co. The chairman will be George Draut, editor of the editorial page, Harrisburg Patriot-News. I. W. Abel, secretary-treasurer of the United Steelworkers of America, will speak on "The im pact of Technological Change.” The dinner speaker will be Rich ard E. Rentz, co-publisher of the SIGN UP AT HUB + OOB % MARCH 14-18 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA New Castle News, whose topic will be “The Doors.” James A. Dunlap, managing ediior of fhe Sharon Herald, will be chairman of the Satur day morning meeting which will concern management, labor and their relations with the press. Speakers will be Dale McFeal iers, vice president for infor mation services of Westinghouse Electric Corp., Gordon H. Cole, public relations director of the International Association of Ma chinists, and A. H. Raskin, la bor reporter of The New York Times. • —the antithesis of perspicacity. Right? Worth knowing? Right! ; Too often, driving a car is like reading a textbook. It can make you •drowsy no matter how much sleep you get. But safe NoDoz fights this kind of “hypnosis.” Safe NoDoz alerts you with caffeine—the same refreshing stimulant in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. S. So to keep perspicacious while you drive, t, .-TV study, and work—keep NoDoz handy. Tha ul* stay iwakl labial available avarywbara. Anothai (ina product of Grow Liboratorfaa. REA & DERICK Mafeer Theatre Plans 8 Plays Dr. Walter H. Walters, head of! the Department of Theatie Arts, I has announced that eight plays ;have been scheduled for the sum jmer season of the Mateer Play house at Standing Stone. ■The' Playhouse, going into its third 10-week season, will be run as a student laboratory by the department. The schedule of the plays to be presented is June 20, “Visit to [Small Planet” by Gore Vidal;; [June 27, “Middle of the Night” by Paddy Chayefsky; July 4 “The .Gazebo” by Alec Coppel; July 11 jand 18, “A Streetcar Named De ,sire” by Tennessee,Williams; July 25 and August 1, “Twelfth Night” by William Shakespeare; August JB, “A View from the Bridge” by Arthur Miller; August 15, “The ;Male Animal” by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent; and August 22, “Two for the Seesaw” by Wil liam Gibson. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS BUY. SELL, TRADE, TELL NoDoz® could savo your life. GET NOpOZ at . . . 121 South Allen SJL, oCoohd Jit ft- HfciiHi OUT OF FILM IN HOLLYWOOD? Even if shortlived, the recent Hollywood actors’ strike caused frenzied nerves and frantic filming. It seems that the Screen Actors’ Guild wants part of the three hundred to five hundred million dollars the studios get for selling their post 1948 films. To us, of course, this means more and better late late shows. Caught on the set by Life photograph ers as the strike interrupted filming were Liz Taylor clad in a sheet of a scene in M-G-M’s “Butterfield 8” and Debbie Reynolds sliding down the banister on Paramount’s “The Pleasure of His Company” set. Lamenting l.velies Gina and Marilyn are also shown. PERSONALITY PLUS FOR PRESIDENT LUe's study of popular opin ion determined what the vot ers want in the new United States President. The five most wanted qualities, which are chiefly concerned with person ality and diplomacy, might well be a guide for campus politi cians and voters. The seven top candidates are viewed ob jectively and critically by the public and free range of opin ion was encouraged when pro vocative fill-in-the-puncli-line cartoons were distributed. LEADING THE LIFE OF ROCKEFELLER Not many Penn State men would complain about the ex pected male role in the New York deb circuit, now in full whirl. Social requirements in clude the ability to deftly bal ance three champagne glasses in one hand, don tuxedo with apparent comfort and cosmo politan grace and dance to the music of Meyer Davis. Life captured the mood in their pictures of this season's round of parties. A combination of suavity, nonchalance and perhaps even a little boredom seem to prevail as one round of parties succeeds another. PAGE SEVEN SPRING VACATION IN NEW ZEALAND Life, photographer George Silk thinks it beats Bermuda. You would piobably have to cut a few classes to reach this colorful “down-under” paradise but from the looks of the pic ture, a beach party at Piba beach where the breakers are fifteen feet high would be worth the risk. “Glow, Little Glowworm, Glow” must be the password in the cavern at Waitomo where thousands of glowworms hang from the ceiling. Mr. Silk pho tographed the spectacular sight which cannot be equalled any where else on the globe. BRITISH BOOST ON BROADWAY If a New York weekend is in your plans, try to see “Five Finger Exercise,” an impoited London drama. With a cast like Jessica Tandy, Roland Culver, Michael Bryant, Juliet Mills and Brian Bedford, Life picks this as one of the substantial hits of the season. Some tense scenes are shown and emotion is high when 2 tutor is hired by a polite English family for their daughter. PIONEER LAUNCHES NEW FRONTIER Even the Russians have to admit that the newest and most impressive ring around tile sun is that made by the United States Pioneer V. Launched last week, the Pioneer V is part of the most advanced space ex periment yet to be conducted. It will come closer to the sun thaaany object ever controlled by man. However, it won't be until the class of '63 is ready to graduate that the Saturn, a much needed rocket to observe the Pioneer will be ready to launch. Life photographers were on hand to observe the launching and the replica in Washington which boast the unique paddle wheel. LOOK AT LIFE In our busy whirl we some times forget that life exists outside the Nittany Valley. This week watch for the float ing golf ball, not necessarily that of a Syracuse golfer. Life's colorful chameleon with the revolving eyes would prbbably win Ugly Man Contest hands down. Read about the fifty three year old freshman at Billy Graham's successful Af rican crusade despite a rigged “witch doctor.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers