PAGE FOUR Stone Valley Rec Area Not Ready This Summer The Stone Valley Recreation Area originally scheduled for completion this year, will not be available for use this sum ei The darn constructed across Engineering Camp, has been corn be removed and beaches and oth er facilities built. says Dr. Peter W, Fletcher, director of the School of Forestry. Fletcher heads a com mittee working on plans for the use of the recreation area Lawrence J. Perez, professor of civil engineering, who directed the design and construction of the dam, said that work is progress in.e with the clearing of logs. brush and other debris from the lake area as they float to the su face and are washed ashore. This debris would be a serious hazard to the users of the lake which is formed by a 42-ft. darn that spans COO feet. With a shoreline of nearly two miles, the lake formed by the dam covers 72 acres, pro viding an area about three and one-half times the area of the lake at nearby Whipple Dam State Park. The const;•uction of the im pounded earth darn was made pos sible largely by gifts through the Alumni Fund. Funds from alumni and other private sources are now being sought to develop facilities. It is planned to construct picnic arras and sandy beaches along designated areas of the shore, as funds become available. There will be facilities for canoes, rowboats, and sailboats, as the project develops. Plans for the stocking of fish and the establishment of a wild life area with the possibility of controlled hunting are also under consideration. Two main roads to the area are planned. one to serve each side of the lake. One will be the road that has been used as the entrance to the civil engineering camp. The other will enter the area at Cht:r ter Oak and cross a bridge to be constructed by the University up stream from the lake. Control points will be estab lished at each of the two en irances where fees will be col lected from persons utilizing the acili ties. These admission charges, as yet undetermined, will be used for maintenance of the recreational area and facil ities. The committee plans to appoint n resident director for the area ho \vitt he responsible for the enforcement of regulations per t:lining to hours the area will he Open. use of equipment. safety measures, etc. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE Frill SALE: 1.K,9 Sprite.. White. 27.4111 rnilt.=. yoll m ) tike I ' llll 41101 11 N L-6221.. Alum Ihrve ht kith $1..1,• I I et,. bed rw,rlis, line easily rlill,l'l/11 into !Andy. Very Itea,msl , lr.. ('all AU 4 slier t, p.m, FOR RENT 11A1.1' OF A 1 , 01'10.1.: rvotti b.r runt I'm (L11 iu fsniiiy holm. tcith prix ute 1.1,1 h anti t ri . fe varkiue. AD S-1,11,9. 'fn !rim Nerl.l/111 , Ant C;dl Jim L-C:40.,, A 1;1'M ENI Hitt RENT 1)••;•%, r,Ar. tvfriVerstinr klkii 11,0. trit• II() 1;-65145 nflr 3 p.m. m()DERN, rtittNistirr,, rfri,•it•nvy blurt Inc lit. :1 miles from St tr l'‘)!legu. As),il al•le• 11 1, W f.r 111111111 A couplt , on!y. La rkr• lairs /010 laundry 14.n.m. Th: t<velthlroi irncdrd nrr SI. fill Cherrirs S111111d:1 at HO C-6f;1 1 .1 Iff te.r I; p.m. AVA ILA ISLE tii:l•'l'. I ruadr•rii to rni-hod c•tfirirury opnrimoot. contra! ('all Al) i-71'.411 or AD 1-41,51+. l'io kitty FOR RENT IMMEDIATELY Three the .I,ht stars. f,,r wen only. l'atrl. ing Anil lAN'. l'nll All WANTED TYNN(: wANTvui! quick xct•tit ork Cull All 1 , 0!!...!,. I'OSITION AVAI LA 1:1.1.; in srna II U.S my nett hotel chain fur graduate HMO Adm. cturicur.. UAW 111‘ , 11thly t ftx h eel.: mum and i.ua d, t tntion, t o yrn contract. WI ite Y. 11. Jacobson, Gran Hotel. Managua, N;earattua. MISCELLANEOUS 1 !GUMS' ENGLISH tiIcYCI.F.S nth . to •lyd. 1941-11 111,1 be in 1:0041 emiklilinn. rhone Katie ohm-on UN 6-4611 i affir Shaver Creek near the Civil ipleted but hazards must still Art Ed Grads Hold Meeting In HUB Today The annual summer conference of the Penn State Graduate Club in art education will be held at the University today and tomor row. Dr. Frank Barron, a research psychologist in the Institute of Personality Assessment and Re search at the University of Cali fornia, will present the keynote address at 3:15 p.m. today in the HUB assembly room. His topic will he "Creative Vision." Registration will take place from 12 to 5 p.m. today at the HUB. Dr. Edward 'Matti]. associate professor of art education, will show some fine films this even ing at 7:30 p.m. in the HUB as sembly room. Tomorrow• morning the open ing address will be given by J. R. Rackley. dean of the College of Education. at 9 a.m. on "Re cent Developments in the College of Education." A panel discussion on "The Future of Research in Art Education" will be featured. Three different group meetings kvill follow with individual re search reports to be given. A bus iness meeting will be held in t/ - i? afternoon followed by a picnic. CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS 50c BUYS 17 WORDS f , 11!/ - 1,4111, THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Irish Farce Scheduled For Moteer The Mateer Playhouse at Standing Stone will offer J. M. Synge's Irish comedy, "The Playboy of the Western World," beginning Monday and running for one week. A Satire, the show has been con sidered one of the finest folk comedies to come out of Ireland. It deals with a young buck who becomes a hero, a playboy, a vil lain and a man—all within 24 hours. Featured in the production, to be directed by Max Fischer, will be Frank Browning as the young man, Patricia Thompson as an untamed Irish lass, Ann Driscoll as an eager widow and Ronald Bishop as Browning's father. Performances of William Shakespeare's - Twelfth Night" will he presented tonight and to morrow, closing out a two week run. Also closing out a two week run at the Boal Barn Playhouse in Boalsburg is the Noel Coward comedy, ^Private Lives. - The English comedy features Jon Bar ry Wilder and Marion Glass. Beginning Thursday the attrac tion at the Boal Barn will be Ar thur Miller's "All My Sons." French Visitors -- (Continued from page one) \Veil, chief translator for the group. "Youth in France are net concerned with political things." he said. "Here you talk about it at eVerV meal." Brigitte Bardot was i•lassified only as a very interesting "export product." "The French make more money exporting Brigitte Bardot than they do exporting Renault-Dau phines." said Anil Barclay. LA College to Add Broadcasting Major An undergraduate major in broadcasting, designed for students who wish professional training for careers in radio and television, will be added to the curricula of the Liberal Arts college this fall. Students enrolling in this major will be candidates in the bachelor of arts degree pro-I— gram. the following principles: The School of Journalism, de- •Founded in a broad, liberal partment of speech, and depart-ieducation. ment of theatre arts: and the Di-! •Includes understanding of all vision of Academic Research anW mass media, and a particular un- Services arc cooperating in offer ing the new major. derstanding of broadcasting. Other academic units of the *Responsibility inherent in the University, including the Col- operation of a media of communi lege of Education, were consult- ications. ed in developing the program. L ®An opportunity to specialize Marlowe D. Frolte, assistant, in training for a particular broad professor of journalism, has been casting career in addition to train named chairman of a special in all phases of broadcasting. versity Committee on Broadcast- Students who enroll in the ma im; that will administer the ma- jor will be required to fulfill the jot . . requirements for graduation from In planning the major, FrokOhe College of Liberal Arts in said, a thorough study of broad-!addition to 32 to 38 hours of pro casting curriculums in other un i-!fessional courses in communica versities and colleges wa s mad e .tions and broadcasting. and numerous broadcasters were • The professional requirements consulted. include 16 semester hours of "As a result," he says, "we "core" courses. Other professional believe that we have developed ,courses will be elected by the a uniquely appropriate ap- •student in his area of pecializa proach to broadcast educetion." tion to fulfill the requirements of The approach was guided by,the major. gives you a vacation all summer! A room air conditioner lets you sleep cool as a mountain stream—even under a light blanket! You're really on vacation when you cook electrically! With an automatic electric range you set the con trols and forget the cooking. Isn't electricity your biggest summer bargain? ELECTRICITY ... high value at low cost 1111..° t , WEST PENN POWER Electricity FRIDAY. AUGUST 5. 1960
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers