82 Nation Summit isarmament Talks Proposed By Russia UNITED NATIONS, N.Y (il 3 ) The Soviet Union pro posed yesterday a summit conference on disarmament of 82 U.N. members at the General Assembly' opening Sept. 20. While heads of all governments would be invited, the em phasis would be on the big powers. At the same time the Russians turned down President String Group To Present Last Show The final concert by the Claremont String Quartet for this summer will be presented tonight at 8 in ihe Hetzel Union ballroom. The concert will open with Quartet in F major, K. 590 by Mozart. It will continue with Schoenberg's String Trio and af ter the intermission the program will close with Quartet in F ma jor, opus 96 (American) by Dvo rak. Since their beginning in 1953, the quartet violinists Vla dimir Weisman and Marc Gott lieb, celloist Irving Klein and William Schoen, viola have dropped all outside activity. They have already made sever al nation-wide tours, and re corded for three record com panies. After tonight's concert, they will go to the Vancouver Music Festival .before taking off on a world tour which will fill their schedule till next spring. The first stops are planned for Hawaii and Australia. Afterwards they will travel across Asia and Europe. On reaching the U.S. again, they will make a cross country tour, winding up on the West Coast some time next spring. New Conferences Attract Persons To Campus Study Five new conferences will bring about 745 more persons to campus this week. The Summer Alumni College and two workshops started yes terday. The Summer Alumni College will enroll about 100 alumni this week for selected liberal arts courses as part of the continuing liberal education program. Next week another 100 alumni are ex pected to attend a week-long leadership conference. A work Shop for cooperating teachers in vocational agriculture and a dairy bacteriology short course also started yesterday. A greenhouse florists confer ence was expected to increase the campus population by 400 from today till Thursday. Another 175 persons are expect ed for the art education confer ence graduate club Friday and Saturday. Murphy Named Asst. Dean of Men Raymond 0. Murphy, for mer counselor coordinator for all men's dormitories on cam pus, has been named assistant dean of men and will direct the residence hall counseling program. He succeeds Dr. William B. Crafts, who resigned earlier this summer to accept the position of dean of men at the University of Pittsburgh. Murphy's job responsibilities will be the same as those of Crafts and he foresees no big change in the system. He said the biggest problem this year will be setting up counseling and men's self-governing and ju dicial systems in the new Pollock Eisenhower's proposal that the UN Disarmament Commission, al so made up of all 82 member na tions, be called into session as early as possible this month in advance of the Assembly. Soviet Ambassador Piston D. Morozov, acting UN permanent representative, made Moscow's views known in a letter to Am bassador Luis Padilla Nervo of Mexico, Disarmament Commis. sion chairman. Padilla Nervo has suggested in a letter to all commission mem bers that it meet on Aug. 15. He sent the letter after confer ring informally with delegates on U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge's call July 22 for a com mission meeting. Lodge accused the Soviet Union of breaking Up the East-West negotiations in Geneva, and said the commission should have an opportunity to consider the situation now con fronting the world on disarma ment. There was no immediate re action from Lodge, who was designated by Eisenhower to present the U.S. position to the commission. Lodge, the Repub. lican vice-presidential candi date, will resign his post as chief U.S. delegate the United Nations after presenting the U.S. case. Morozov declared that in order to have successful disarmament talks they must be held on the proper level. "The Soviet government be lieves that personal participation on the heads of government of member states of the United Na tions in the discussion of the dis armament problem at the General Assembly would answer this pur pose best of all." Howell to Attend Geophysics Forum Dr. B. F. Howell, Jr., head of (thet department of geophysics and geochemistry, is attending the !twelfth annual triennial assem !llly of the International Union of igeophysics at Helsinki, Finland, as an official U.S. delegate of the National Academy of Sciences, !National Research Council from July 25 to August 6. ! I He will read a paper entitled !"Absorption of Seismic Waves in Rock" before the Internationl As sociation of Seismology and Phys ics of the Earth's Interior. iTwo other members of the fac lulty attending the assembly are Dr. Leonard F. Herzog, assistant professor of geophysics, and Dr. !Charles L. Hosier, associate pro tfessor of meteorology. MURPHY residence halls. A native of Beaver Falls, Mur- #tuntitrr VOL. 2. No. 15 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING. AUGUST 2. )960 RIVE CENTS Dyer-Bennet Will Give Folk Music Program Richard Dyer-Bennet, musicologist, composer and singer of folk songs, will present the second Artists Series program of the summer at 8 p.m. Thursday at . the . Pavilion (for merly called the ice skating rink). A stage and chairs will be set up for this, the first pre sentation under the large roof of this new facility. In the event of rain the concert will be changed to Schwab Auditorium. There will be no charge for admission and 'tickets will not be needed. Accompanying himself On the Spanish guitar, Dyer-Bennet will sing a selection of his repertoire of more than 600 traditional Eng lish and American folk songs, songs from others lands : and a few of his own compositions, Because of the extent of his work, the world famous tenor has been able to include ballads from the time of the battle of Agincourt to World War IL • At ease with many languages, he has not limited himself to America and the British Isles; but reaches as well into foreign heri tages for his stock. He is also in terested in the rarer art songs of the great composers i.nd in cludes sonic of his own ballads relating to present 'problems . . Born in England the descendent of one of England's noble Dyer-Bennet was raised in California and educated at the University of California at Berk eley. TENOR AND GUITARIST Richard Dyer-Bennet, who will pre ent a program at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Pavilion (formerly the ice skating rink). The program is sponsored by the Artists Series and is open to the public without charge. Current. Stage Plays Begin Second Week Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" at Mateer Playhouse and "Private Lives" at Beal Barn are both being presented for the second week to area theatregoers. Mateer Playhouse's production of "Twelfth Night," con sidered one of Shakepeare's funniest and most racy comedies, 24 instructors Enroll . In Conservation Institute Twenty-four elementary and secondary school teachers are en rolled in the second conservation laboratory of the summer session. The teachers are provided with an opportunity to obtain first hand outdoor experience and practical information concerning conservation of soil, water, for ests, wildlife, and minerals. Timetables on Sale Timetables of courses offered during the fall semester are now on sale at the main Het zel Union desk. phy is a graduate of C i alifornia State Teachers College. He re ceived his master of education de ; .gree in counseling in education from the University in 1958. He ,will receive his doctorate in Aug ust. After college he was a speech therapist in the public school sys tem of. Somerset County. He served with the United States Army as a personnel specialist from 1954 to 1956. He has worked in the residence hall counseling program at the University since 1957. Murphy is a member of Phi Sigma Pi, honor professional or ganization for undergraduate stu dents preparing for the teaching profession; Phi Delta Kappa, pro fessional education fraternity; and lota Alpha Delta, national gui dance society. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE By MIKE CORRADO is under the direction of Max Fischer. It will be presented daily at 8:40 p.m. until Saturday, Au gust 8. The story tells of a twin sister and brother, Sebastian 'and Vi ola, who are shipwrecked near the country of Illyria and of the people they meet there. •Confu sion arises when Viola decides to mascarade as a boy. Featured in the cast is Patricia Thompson as Viola and David Frank as the boisterous drunkard Sir Toby Belch. Leslie Preston plays the part of the mysterious and alluring Lady Olivia and Ronald Bishop. as her pompous steward, Malvolio. Noel Coward's comedy "Private Lives" will continue its 'run Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8:30 p.m. at Boal Barn, Route 322 in Boaisburg. If is the story of a fashion able young man who travels to the Riviera for his honeymoon only to find his former wife also honeymooning . in the same hotel in the adjoining room. He begins to have 'doubts on the wisdom •of his divorce with comic results. ' The young man, Ellyot, is played by Jon Barrie Wilder, his former wife, Amanda, by Marion Glass, his present wife, Sybil, by Ruth Yeaton, and Amanda's hus band, Victor, by Glenn Seheffer. Rev. Brouse to Lead Discussion Thursday Rev. Paul Brouse will speak on the topic of "Liturgical Renewal in the Church: Reform or Mere Form?" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Luthera:• Student Center, 418 West College Avenue. All dents are invited to attend. Urpiatt Dur i n g his undergraduate days the young man was di vided between a career in pro fessional Soccer and the life of a concert singer. For a while he thought he could combine them. His plans were changed when, in a soccer game, an opponent' hurtled into him'and broke his nose. Realizing that future injuries of ,this sort could permanently ruin his singing career, he de voted himself entirely to voice study with Mrs. J. W. Beckman. With the encouragement of his teacher, Dyer-Bennet jour neyed to Sweden to hear the ancient troubadour, Sven Scho- Lander. Deeply impressed, he set - about developing a reper toire of his own in the then un developed field of American and English ballads - and folk songs. . Received first, oddly enough, by the night clubs of New York, his fame spread rapidly after his initial appearance at. Town Hall in Now York in 1994. Ile was soon well known to audiences from coast to coast. His appearance here is part of Dyer-Bennet.'s annual American tour under the management of Impresario S. flurok. Marbut Leaves Fnr Jamaica Dr. Frederick B. Morbid, pro fessor of journalism, ieft this week for Kingston, Jamaica:Fed eration of the West Indies, where he will teach a short course in journalism for British West In dies journalists. He will return to the Univer sit,/ September 15. The short course is offered by the Federation in coo oration with the' University College of the West Indies and the Interna tional Educational Exchatu Ser vice of the United States State Department. Students of the short course will include members of the news paper staffs on the islands of the British West Indies. Professor Marbut, a specialist in history and law of journalism, and the Latin 'American press, has lectured in Ecuador, Vene zuela, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay 'and Bolivia in recent years. Free Movie Tomorrow The movie "A Night to Re member" will be shown tomorrow at 9 p.m. on, the HUB lawn. The film, in black and white. will star Kenneth Moore. There- will he no admission charge.. ~~.~.. ~;~.