Who's In the Running for Veep See Page 2 VOL. 2. No. 14 ix.n Nomine ed, Who Else? Community Set for Five Community living will get its first test on an all-campus level this fall when five communities are organized in the residence hall areas. With the addition of the vast Pollock Residence Hall area to the living unit scene, the community living concept can be Housing Heads Well Assemble At Conference Five University administra tors will attend the 12th an nual conference of the associa tion of College and University Housing Officers in Bloom ington, Ind., July 31-Aug. 3. Otto E. Mueller, director of housing, James S. Kline, head of assignment division of housing, Robert C. Proffitt, director of Food Services, and John A. Dorn broski, personnel and training supervisor, Food Services, will go as delegates to the conference at Indiana University. Dr. Dorothy J. Lipp, dean of women, will be a panelist in one of the sessions on Student Values and Residence Hall Liv ing. Mueller is in charge of displays at the conference and a spread of the new Pollock Residence halls and the faculty offices being de signed in McAllister Hall will be t included in the layout. Kline will participate in an in-; terest session on Housing Office; Management an d Procedures. Dombroski will be a participant ink a session on Training Food Serv-1 ice Supervisors. About 600 delegates from 250 member institutions are expect ed io attend the conference which will also discuss such timely topics as off-campus housing, married student hous ing, and community living, a concept recently initiated on this campus. 1 1 :C1=1 Bard's 'l2th Night' 2 Acts Too Long By JAY RAKE Collegian Reviewer The current production of William Shakespeare's! "Twelfth Night" at the Mateer Playhouse at Standing Stone! gets off to a bawdy and riotous start then slows down and! turns into a rather disappointing evening. Dealing with twin brother and sister separated during a storm at sea, the girl's imperson, - ation of a boy and the romances (_!titious and lose their funniness; of numerous characters, the play and Bishop seems out of place as, is considered one of Shakespeare's the puritan in love. sure-fire comedies. * * * I And the first act is a sure- Some nice performances help fire laugh-getter. David Frank ito keep the show moving toward as Sir Toby Belch, William Moo- ; its conclusion, Frank Browning as ney as Sir Andrew Aquecheek IFeste , the wise fool, is delightful and Ronald Bishop as Malvolio and adds some nice dancing and cavort and clown to the delight la melodious voice to his witty', of the audience. !sayings. I With rolling eyes and hilarious drunkardness Frank and Mooney scheme against the blundering! Bishop. Their dance and song round are high points of the first act However, once past the operung i part in the entire show Patricia! segment the mistakes appear andghompson as Viola works hard the disappointment sets in. Prank' to retain her character while most! forgets how old he is supposed to!of the others are losing theirs.! be, Mooney's actions become rep-I (Continued on page six) Living Areas put into effect on a large scale, Seven new residence halls, four for women and three for men in crease the campus residence hall capacity by 2000, upping the total number of students housed on campus to 8,500 well over half the total student enrollment. About 4100 of the students housed on campus will be men and 4400 women. The Pollock Halls area will be divided, with Nittany men's dorms joining the Pollock A men's building and the four women's buildings to form the largest community on campus. This community of 1000 women and 1200 men will eat in the Pollock Area dining hall. The other two men's buildings in the Pollock Area will be joined with Simmons and McElwain Halls in two communities of 500 women and 225 men each. Pol lock B residents will eat in Sim mons dining room and Pollock C residents will eat in McElwain. The other major community will be West Halls. About 275 women will be housed in McKee Hall and 75 in Irvin, Hamilton, Thompson, Watts and Jordan will house 1200 men. All West Hall residents will eat in Waring. Atherton Hall may become a community with town indepen dent men. One hundred fifty meal tickets for Atherton dining room will be available for purchase by town men. Major living areas not yet incorporated into the commu nity living plan are North Halls which houses 1144 men and South Halls which house 1000 women. Community living at this stage means only coeducational dining facilities, but it is expected that social programs and possibly even student government will eventu ally be set up on a community basis. Peter E. Deuel as Orsino, the prince smitten with love for the beautiful Olivia (Leslie Preston) shows a charm and gentleness which enhances the role. I In probably the most difficult FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA., FRIDAY MORNING. JULY 29. 1960 Orchestra To l'icesent Ist Concert A concert featuring the mu- . chiefly for his demonstration of sic of two contemporary Pr i welith •Night' personal powerh is arrival in p l a h rty affairs. For after ere on- American composers in addi- day, Nixon forced the rewrit • tion to Bach, Bizet and De- ' T ing of parts of the party plat- Bussy will be presented by 1 O Continue form—including the civil rights . plank—to conform to his views the Summer Sessions. Orches-.At P ayhouse I of what is needed in the contest with Democratic John F. Ken tra at 8 tonight in Schwab. ,: nedy of Massachusetts for the William Schuman and Charles Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night'; . While House. is running now at. Mateer, while! Miller are the American compos- 'There was grumbling--,in fact ers whose work will be featured'Noel Coward's "Private Lives b ens tonight at Boal Barn. I. some bitterness—from party ele in the program. I P "Twelfth Night," which opene& mehis which did not subscribe i° The 55-piece orchestra. com-Imonda3.. will play until SaturdaY,those views. But M the end, Nixon posed of musicians associated with various summer programs at thug. 6. Directed by Max Fischer, And his way. ! the play employs the language! And last night, the GOP le the University, will play 'News- 'gions happily handed him their reel for Orchestra" by Schuman iand costumes of Shakespeare's . lbanner to carry in the 1960 poll reel aaainst a modern set and two pieces by Miller—Ken-theatre, '` ' , tical wars. lucky Mountain Dance and Rum-1 The company had thought to • • In Nixon, the GOP is offer ha Mexicana. ;make use of modern costumes as ing the nation as successor to The concert will open with a 'well, but found it impossible un-; I•D.Eisenhowerl Dwight a re la composed Prelude, Sleepers, Wake,!der,the pressure of a stock corn- 1 . , lively young man as presiden composed by Bach and arranged!Pan3rs schedule. 1 fiat candidates go—or have gone by Ormandy. I Built around the adventures of, i n the past. He is four years The first movement of Bizet's a twin brother and sister, Sebas- older than Kennedy. ,Symphony in C and Deßussy'sjian and Viola, the company's; For Nixon, the nomination is Petite Suite as arranged by Mou- presentation promises to be an! another triumph in the steady : ton are included in the varied; evening of entertainment. program. ! ! The light comedy features ;march of a man who has never Pa - known a major political setback.. Kindler's arrangement of Three'iricia Thompson as Viola and Da - 1 , 17th Century Dutch Tunes by ; !vid Frank as Sir Toby Belch.' It Was in this same hall, just I Valerius will also be played. - i eight years ago, that Nixon was Curtain time is 3:40 p.m. The program will close with! !surprisingly tapped as running The Coward romantic comedy, IR im s k y-Korsakoff's Polonaise < ,,mate by Gen. Dwight. D. Eisen- Private Lives," will run for two !from "Christmas Night," arranged .., . - hower, the World War II hero wbp 1 8 30 weekends starting ionig it at • by Woodhouse. . . defeated the. late Sen. Robert A. I Dealing with the meeting of a; Taft This will be the first of two Ohio for the presidential ; 1-ift of presidential concerts couple on separate lion concerts scheduled by the orches-;divorced nomination. e3moons on the Riviera. the play , tea which has only been drawn At the time Nixon was a junior features Jon Barry Wilder as El- 1 together since the beginning of senator from. California. • lvot and Marion Glass as Amanda. • Mid-Session, according to con- i - i A Whittier, Calif., lawyer, he ductor Lowell Boorse, associate,.. , i had served !Iwo terms in the professor of music. The second;Koperts Will Address House. And, just two years be concert will be given Aug. 10. !Teacher Institute Today ' ; fore the 1952 convention, he had ! ! Dr. George A. Roberts, vice! won the election to the senate. president of the Vanadium-Alloys; Still, he wasn't generally re- Steel Company, Latrobe, will , garded as a GOP heavyweight. speak to the members of the 1960 Nationally, Ni xon was known Summer Institute for Teachers of c hi e fly f or hi s pursuit of Commu- Science and Mathematics at 4:15 n i s i s as a member o f the home 'p.m. today, 214 Boucke. tivities. But. Nixon proved a harm]-work ing. able campaigner. And in his seven-plus years as vice president, the man from Whittier, has moved a long way. He went to Moscow and argued publicly with Soviet Premier Ni kita Khrushchr.w. He visited Latin America and was a target of stones and spit from leftist riot ers in Peru and Venezuela. He reaped political advantage from the incidents. At home, among the old pros of the GOP, here was growing respect for NixonN as a political craftsman of high orler. No August Services Set There will be no Sunday chapel services during the month of August. c•-, • . OL_ NEW parts of the campus meet behind the Hammond Building. Engineering units (upper right) were built around the turn of the century. The new unit is Scheduled fur completion in the fall. Service driveway separates them. Forces Civil Rights Plank To Conform to His Views CONVENTION HALL, Chicago uP) Richard Milhous Nixon—a 47-year-old Californian—was nominated for Presi dent last night by the Republican National Convention. The vice president waltzed off with the nomination—as had long been certain—in the climax to a convention notable Latin American Educators See Page 3 Neuter's Work Summarized !The work done in the field of special education by 'Margaret A. jNeuber, profe:isor of education. is 'recognized in the hook, "Practical ;Programs for the Gifted" by Jack jKough, recently published by the 'Science Research Associates, Inc., ;Chicago. 111. Her major contribution to gift ed child work have been in the area of teacher education and !speaking. She organized the fir-t university program for the educa jtion and certification of teachuis of the gifted mid has supervg.ed several doctoral dissertations in ;this area. Neither initiated the organ ization— of a Pennsylvania Slide Association for the gifted. and, AS 'a consultant to school. syn;ins, has been instrumental in plan ning many gifted child programs. FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers