urnnwr VOL. 2. No. 6 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. JULY 1. 1960 THIS IS WHERE YOU ARE—Merwick J. Black, junior in aero nautical engineering, interprets campus map for Mr. and Mrs. John Mergel and daughter Lanie. Lanie was one of 6,000 new freshman going through counseling before starting college this fall. Soon Time for ®inks New Frosh Traced Through Counseling The Mergel family arrived on campus bright and early on a warm summer morning. Margaret "Lanie" Mergel will be a freshman this fall. She and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Mergel, had come for the freshman pre-registration counseling program. Merwick J. Black, a friend of Lanie's and Memberships Open For Tennis Club Memberships are still being ac cepted in the newly-formed Ten nis Club at the University. The Club enrolls faculty and staff members, graduate student s, townspeople, and their families. Varsity courts on east campus are reserved for Club members from 10 a.m. to dark, daily. Lock er facilities are available for men in the Nittany area. Tennis instruction is now being offered, according to John Egli, manager of the courts. Private instruction for adults and group Instruction for children will be arranged. Summer session students, it is explained, may join the Club on a monthly basis. Other member ships are available for the entire season. Further information con cerning membership, dues, and instruction can be obtained from Egli, UN 5-4102. Public Schools Need. Course In Family Finance—Gemmel) The need for family finance the individual, economic, social education in the public schools and cultural implications of the was emphasized last night by Dr. increased emphasis upon security. James Gemmel!, speaking at a banquet closing the. three-week They should consider the efforts Family Finance Workshop at the of individuals, business and gov- University. ernment to maintain security as "Instruction in family finance complementary efforts in our so should be integrated across the! cie!Y, with the individual bear curriculum from elementary toling the primary responsibility," high school level," Gemmell told Gemmell said. the assembled educators at the "And. opportunities to study Hetzel Union dining room. He these problems may be provid did not advocate separate courses ed in the regular school carri on family finance. culum," he said. The educators had just corn- Gemmel], himself has written a pleted an intensive study pro- i teaching guide to show how fam gram to see how family finance ily finance instruction can be in instruction can be integrated eluded in English literature into various courses on the ele- courses, according to the books mentary, junior high and secon- selected to be read. dary level. Gemmel' drew on historical background to show how econom ic security is an ingredient of the "greater well-being" of the people and why awareness of the fam ily security problem is keener now than a half century ago. "Our youth should be aware of FOR A BETTER PENN STATE a junior in aeronautical engineer ing at the University, accom panied the family. Upon arrival Lanie, her par ents and Merwick were ushered into the Hetzel Union auditorium along with all other future fresh ,men who were to be counseled on that day. Dr. Donald Ford, head of the Division of Counseling, con gratulated the freshmen, saying that they were a part of the "best freshman class ever ad mitted." They had been chosen from 17,000 applications. Ford said the purpose of the freshman pre-registration coun seling program was to get them off to a good start. Research had shown, he - said, if a student got; through his freshman year with' good grades he would probably graduate. After Ford's welcome and gen eral orientation to the day's pro-i gram, Lanie left for the interpre-i tation of her test results in 401 Old Main. She listened carefully while (Continued on Page Eight) A year-long study to evaluate the workshop experience and its eventual impact will be directed by Dr. Andrew V. Kozak, associate professor of education. Graduate assistants will visit the classroom of each workshop participant to see how he incorporates family finance into his teaching, Tottrgiati 'TheGaze6' Will Open At Mateer Current summer produc tions offer theatre goers "The Gazebo", which opens at Ma teer playhouse Monday and the "Hasty Heart" being pre sented tonight and tomorrow at the Boal Barn Playhouse. "The Gazebo," a comedy-mys tery by Alec Coppel, is being di rected by Max Fischer and will feature Ronald Bishop and Patri cia Thompson in the leading roles. The play tells the story of a harassed TV mystery writer who is beset by many problems: a diet he doesn't want, a country house doesn't like, a gazebo he doesn't need and a blackmailer he cannot allow to live. Being a writer of detective plays and the friend of the dis. trict attorney, he decides to do away with the criminal so that he can protect the "guilty" se cret of his actress-wife. He suc ceeds in his plan, only to see complication build upon com plication. Ronald Bishop, director of this week's play "Middle of the Night," will be seen as the TV' writer and Patricia Thompson will play his actress-wife. Others in the cast include Frank Browning as the district attorney; David Frank as the hard-boiled. detective; William Mooney, last sen as Kreton in "Visit to a Small Planet," as the Dook; Ann Dris coll as the persistent real estate (Continued on Page Eight) Firemen's Carnival To Open Tonight The Alpha Fire Company's annual carnival will begin tonight at 6 p.m. on S. Allen St. and continue through July 4 with the exception of Sunday. The carnival, which fills the street from College Ave. to Beaver Ave., will be open from 6 p.m. to 12 p.m. tonight and Saturday. Monday the carnival will be open all day. The program Monday will in clude a doll contest in the morn ing and a pet show in the after noon. In both contests, 25c will be given to each child entering with other prizes given for winning dolls and pets. At 6 p.m., a parade of fire equipment and several bands will pass on College Avenue. The climax will be midnight when the Ford Thunderbird is given away. Members of the Alpha Fire Company began construction ac tivities yesterday afternoon to erect the tent canopy over S. Allen St. The amusements and conces sions, owned and operated by the Alpha Fire Company will be located under the canopy. The Vern Garbrick Rides Company will provide the rides for the car nival. The 125 volunteer firement are participating in this project. The money earned from the carnival will be used to support com munity projects, drives and or ganizations. Williams To Speak The Rev. Preston N. Williams. acting University chaplain, will speak on "A Christian's Responsi blity to the Nation" at the Univer sity Chapel service 'at 9 a.m. Sun day in the Helen Eakin Eisenhow er ChapeL Cuba Uses U.S. Plant FIVE CENTS HAVANA (IP) The confiscated Texaco Oil Co. refinery in Santiago began processing Soviet crude Oil yesterday. The semi-official newspaper Revolucion hailed the action as a sign the 25-million-dollar p ant is no longer foreign-owned. Probable next tartlets I—Priine Minister Fidel Castro's Walker Warned To Foundation By Eisenhower Presidennt Eric . A. Walker has been named to the National Sci ence Foundation Board• by Presi dent Dwight D. Eisenhower. Walker succeeds former Dean M. P. O'Brien of the University of California at Los Angeles. He will serve on the board for six years. Walker was one of three presi dents from land grant universi ties named to the board. Presi dent Conrad A. Elvehjem of the University of Wisconsin and Chan cellor Glenn T. Seaborg of the University of California at Berke- I ley were also named to the board. Six others named to the board include President T. M. Hesburgh of Notre Dame, President W. V. Houston of Rice Institute, Joseph C. Morris of Tulane. William W. Rubbcy - of the U.S. Geological Survey, William 0. Baker of the Bell Telephone Laboratories and Rufus E. Clement, preSident of j Atlanta University. Walker is also a member of the Board of Visitors, U.S. Naval Aca demy, Naval Research Advisory Committee and a trustee of the Institute for Defense Analysis. He was chairman of the National Sci ence Foundation's Committee for Engineering, 1951-53. The next issue of the Sum mer Collegian will be pub lished Wednesday, July 6. It will distributed to the usual places. • First Act Weakens Mateer Production Paddy Chayefsky's , “Middie ofl While it may be possible — to ar the Night," the story of a 53-year- I gue that a person in near hys old widower's love for his '24-t e rics would act this way, it does year-old receptionist, is the cur - 'not necesasrily make for good rent attraction at the Mateff dra.ma. Playhouse at Standing Stone. ,- - - ! Director Bishop has had the It is an over-sweet play about receptionist (Patricia Thompson) the troubles and doubts the prin- overplay the scene. Played this ciples suffer as they attempt to! wa y, the scene, which should be find the love both need. .touching, is uncomfortable and The. woman is slightly neurotic,, not very good. seeking from the manufacturer It is unfortunate Miss Thomp the understanding she cannot getson should he directed this way, from her husband. The mantifac-!for she fits her role. In the si..c turer just wants to grow old grace- and and third acts where she fully, but in helping-his employee underplays the character, she is he discovers there is still a great entirely convincing and enjoyable. deal of life left to be lived. She shows a truthfulness and sincerity which is pleasing' and Once past the first act the pro- highly appropriate for the role, duction is enjoyable and holds especially in a scene where she nicely. However, Chayefsky with:see the husband she is attempt director Ronald Bishop's aid has.ing to divorce and in the final produced a hysteria scene in the scene where she presents the first act which is simply horrible. sons she can love an older man. The playwright has written Max Fischer, as the manufac scene where the unhappy wife, turer, suffers somewhat in the in near hysteria, tells her woes to : second and third acts from' the her boss. Like a faucet being` which plagues Miss turned rapidly on and off, lines) (Continued on page six) Review By JAY RAKE Collegian Reviewer campaign against the United States and "foreign monopolies" are the 26-million-dollar British- Dutch Shell Oil Co. refinery; the ESso Standard of New Jersey re finery; the Cuban Electric Co., the largest remaining American investment in Cuba, and the 125- million-dollar Cuban Telephone, Co. in which the. U.S. Interna tional Telephone & Telegraph Co. owns 65 per cent of the stock. Castro officials have been in charge of Cuban Telephone since March 1959, but have not offi cially taken over. Executives of Esso and Shell, who followed Texaco's example in • refusing to refine Soviet crude, said it appeared a matter of days perhaps hours before their plants also would . be seized by the Cuban Petrol eum Institute. Technically, the Cuban govern ment "intervened" the Texaco properties" for refusal to refine "state-owned oil." The govern ment-controlled press made it clear intervention in. this case meant confiscation. Shell's parent holding com pany, Shell Oil of Canada, an nounced that a shipment of crude oil to Cuba had been sus pended for non-payment and that Shell executives here had been ordered - not to touch the Soviet oil Cuba obtained in a sugar -for-oil exchange. The Canadian firm said the Cu- . ban government has not paid' Shell for oil imports since May of last year and owes more than 17 million dollars. Esso Standard said it has an even larger back log of payment claims for oil al ready processed and sold in Cuba. Wednesday night's ouster, af ter a 13-how; Cabinet session, of Communication Minister Enri que Oiulski Ozacki and his re placement by a little-known but fiery revolutionist, Haul Cur belo Morales, appeared fo signal a move against the 300-million dollar Cuban Electric Co. Otulski had threatened Cuban Electric with intervention for fail ure to complete an expansion pro gram. Company officials said the program had been curbed by a forced rate cut and poor collec tions from government agencies and communities served by the firm, a subsidiary of the Ameri can Foreign Power Co. Sources here said the regime felt 011 ski was not aggressive enough with Cuban Electric. , are alternated with sobs for an extended period.