Power's Family Trusts Red Lawyer See Page 2 VOL. 2. No. 19 Lawrence, who was on campus yesterday to speak at the opening session of the 9th annual Health Conference. Governor Addresses Health Conference Governor David L. Lawrence addressed the opening ses sion of the 9th annual state Health Conference yesterday in Schwab and stressed the need for more medically trained personnel, a new medical school in Pennsylvania, legislation to approve the use of chemical ing convictions, and federal aid to communities for constructing, sewage treatment facilities. "It is clear now that we do not have enough medical schools to train the physicians we need," Lawrence told the 1000 personsl attending the first general meet-I ing of the week-long conference: He called for consideration of building another medical school in the state, the cost of which, he said, should be shared by the fed eral government "Highway accidents are one of our largest unsolved health hazards," said Lawrence as he asked for the Legislature to pass a law giving chemical "drunk driving" tests full weight as evidence in the courts. He also claimed the federal gov ernm'en't has a responsibility to expand the program' of grants-in aid to communities financing ade quate sewage disposal facilities. Lawrence flew into State Col lege yesterday morning. H i s speaking turn was moved up on Review communications frbm across the nation to the Penn State - campus, Aug. 29 to. Sept. 2. f The assembled journalism edu • • icators will study the problems of !adjusting professional education :for journalism and mass commu - - - - Bert Berdis, as Annie's broth- , nications to the age of the elec er, who still believes Keller is : ironic media. i guilty, reveals for the first time 1 Earl J. McGrath, former United . his capacity for straight dra- ;States Commissioner of Education matics, bringing the audience and now executive officer of the! alive as it first begins to doubt !Institute of Higher Education,! Keller. :Teachers College, Columbia Uni-' Although the first act is long,versity. will keynote the conven-; and definitely slow, it is partiallyltion with a speech titled, "Prepa-: ,quickened by the bright perform-!ration for Journalism: Education' ances of Jimmy Avey, as theor Training?" neighborhood boy and Joan Hipsh, He will discuss the question who •portrays the next-door lady of whether journalism educa with a devastating cattiness. Gil l lion owes its greatest responsi- ! Aberg, as her idealist husband,! bility to higher education, of Jack Brilhart as the peeviSh, which it is a part, or to the pro opinionated horoscope enthuiast, fessional fields for which it and Pat Terry as his happy-go- prepares students. lucky wife also shine in parts) McGrath has authored research that were seemingly created forlreports concerning liberal educa them. :tion and professional training, in- Often the actors tend to let the cluding, "Are Liberal Arts Col tension of the play creep into the:l eg e s Becoming Professional happy, relaxed scenes and fail toSchools?" and "Liberal Education reach the happiness of the Keller:in. the Professions." family. But they make up for this! Other sessions of the convention with the gripping way they han-will consider media analyisis re dle the tense scenes. !search, evaluation of communica- The play will continue Thurs-;lions research and public rela [day, Friday, and Saturday at the Lions research. Barn, Route 322 in Boalsburg . 1 The changing role of journal- By ANNE KELLY "All My Sons," the current Community Summer Theatre production at Boal Barn, is a deeply moving story of a fa ther whose desire to provide a good life for his sons domi nates his life, even excluding his responsibility tc other men during the World War II years. Harold Fishbein gives an alter nately hilarious and sensitive performance as Joe Keller, the uneducated and fast-talking busi nessman who has his family and friends convinced that his part ner was responsible for the ship hing out of 121 cracked engine eads during the war. A novice actor, John Muntone nevertheless handles the role of Chris, the son who came back from the war with great ideals only to find that the loss of. America's fighting men meant little more than a "bus occident" to the civilians, with - • 4 .........., < . 5 .-:ze -.- ; ii , , a -......- :' pi o . test results for drunken driv- the afternoon program so he could leave immediately by car for the return trip to Harrisburg. University President Eric A. Walker 'extended greetings to the conferees and said that con ferences such as this enable the University to help fulfill its re sponsibility for making Penn sylvania a safer, healthier, and happier place in which to live. Several other speakers dotted the conference's first day sched ule. Chronic illness—heart disorders, tuberculosis, mental illness, multi ple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, (Continued on page four) , Free Movies Resume • "The Perfect Furlough," a technicolor motion picture starring Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh and Ken ,an Wynn will be shown free of charge on the Hetzel Union Build ing lawn tomorrow at 9 p.m. In case of rain, the movie will be shown in Recreation Hall. the ease of a seasoned veteran, and is particularly moving in the scene where he realizes that his father is actually guilty of the crime. In this role, he puts across the message of the play with great skill.. In a role that requires many different emotions, Kay Carr comes across nicely as Annie, the girl who has come to marry Chris, but finds opposition in his moth er, who refuses to believe that Larry, Chris's brother and Annie's former sweetheart, is dead. She is convincing in the triple role—the happy girl next door, the young lover, and finally, a determined woman. But the most professional per formance of the evening is that lof Anne Grant. She has complete command of both the stage and the audience as the mother who believes that her dead son is still alive. Because if he is dead, his father is responsible for his death. Always near, but never quite reaching hysteria, she will go to any lengths to shield her husband and keep her family together. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA,, TUESDAY MORNING. AUGUST 16. 1960 Federal Aid Granted to Rehab Unit The Rehabilitation Counsel- . ing Project at the University will be partly supported for the academic year 1960-61 by a renewed grant of $74,851 from the federal Office of Voca tional Rehabilitation of the De partment of Health, Education and Welfare. Over $60,000 of this grant is ear marked for 36 traineeships which have been awarded to qualified graduate students working toward master of science degrees in the two-year program. The grant includes an increase of $15,000 over last year's grant of $59,262. The n u'm be r of traineeships offered jumped from 24 to 36 thus giving the University one of the largest re habilitation , counseling pr o grams in the country. Over 30 others universities are conduct ing similar projects. Headed by Dr. Kenneth W. Hyl bert, the project has progressed, rapidly since it began in 1955 with three traineeships and - a limited' grant. In 1958-59 there were 16 traineeships offered through a grant of $41,740. Last year the figure increased to 24 traineeships and a grant of $59,262. The purpose of the expanding program is to prepare rehabilita tion counselors for public and pri vate rehabilitation agencies. Comedy, Drama at Theatres The light comedy of James Thurber and the heavy drama of Arthur Miller will provide a con trast in dramatics for Centre County audiences this week as the Mateer Playhouse at Standing Stone presents "The Male Ani mal," by Thurber and Elliot Nu gent, and the Boal Barn Summer Theatre continues Miller's award winning drama, "All My Sons." - "The Male Animal" stars Wil-! liam Mooney as Tommy Tucker, a professor at a small mid-West- ourn Conference ern university, who unthinkingly starts a storm of both, public and private controversy which in- o e n volves an all-American football et O Comp.us ikA player (Ronald Bishop), a demoni alumni (David Frank), the uni versity's current football.' hero) The annual convention of the American Association for (Peter Deuel), a crusading stu-L., dent editor (Scott Webster) a;.Education in Journalism, will attract approximately 225 pro comic lecture on the habits oLthel fessors, deans and directors of Schools of journalism and Congo Premier Clashes With Secretary-General LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo VP) Premier Patrice Lu mumba clashed openly yesterday with U.N. Secretary-Gen eral Dag Hammarskjold. He said he has lost confidence in Hammarskjold and wants an Asian-African observer group to take over the secretary-general's delicate work in. the 2000 Visitors Jam Campus About 2000 visitors will jam the campus this week as the time table swings into the first of three big convention weeks at the Uni versity now that Mid-session has closed. Half the visitors are attending the 9th annual state Health con ference, which opened Sunday and continues through Thursday. The Institute for Credit Union Personnel, with over 50 persons attending, runs uptil Friday. Yesterday th e Pennsylvania Federation of Labor Conference, a beekeeping short course and a small sawmill operators short course started. • Today flower field days and agriculture and home economics photography short courses will at tract another 100 visitors to cam pus. A 1.-day turkey producers con ference will be held tomorrow, and Saturday 150 are expected to attend the I-day meeting of the Pennsylvania Beekeeping Asso ciation. The week winds up with the 7th annual Folk and Square Dance Festival expected to draw 400-500 people Friday and Saturday. male animal, +d a double love triangle. BY using a tough approach to his problems instead of taking the easy way out, Tucker wins a surprising victory for his sex. Others in the cast include Frank Browning, as a devoted . (Continued on page eight) att Congo. The declaration came in an ex change of letters as multiracial U.N. forces, pledged to political neutrality, moved by air and rail to reinforce Swedish U.N. detach ments in secessionist Katanga province. . The neutrality, irritating to Lit mumba, was demonstrated during street demonstrations yesterday tri Elisabethville, Katanga's .caPi tal, against the independence minded provincial Premier Moise Tshombe. In New York the U.N. an nounced Hammarskjold has asked Ambassador Armand Be rard of France, president of the Security Council for August, to call the 11-nation Security Council into session to deal with the new problems. He asked that Berard fix the date so that the Congolese delegation would have time to get to 'New York. It was indicated that no meet ing would be held before tomor row and that it might be set for Thursday. Tshombe's police used tear gas Ito break up the demonstrations. 'The Swedish U.N. troops, out on 'their first day of patrol in Elisa :bethville after taking over guard 'duty from Belgian soldiers, looked )the other way. Five plane loads of Belgian sol diers flew out of Elisabethville to Kamina, their ground-and-air treaty base in Katanga 300 mires northwest of Elisabethville. This is part of the withdrawal that Bel gium says will be completed only when the safety of Belgian civil ians remaining in the Congo is as sured. With his country in near col lapse around him and his own position shaky, Lumumba made five demands on Ham marskjold: •Remove U.N. troops from all (Continued on page five) ism schools in higher education, the future of photo-journalism, and mass communications and the American culture are other problems that will be studied., Radiogelevision, the American magazine and advertising are oth er fields that will he examined, A major address on broadcast coverage of the political conven tions and campaigns will be de livered by Samuel J. Sharkey, editor of NBC news. Martin Mayer, , author of the popular best-seller, "Madison Ave nue USA," will present :Os con cept of the role of advertising in the American social and economic order. Herbert Brucker, president of the American Council on Edu cation for Journalism and edi tor of the Hartford, Conn., Courant, will address the con vention on educational prob lems. Several panel disc•usc;icros on contemporary journalism and ad vertising topics will also be fea tured. Host for the convention is the University's School of Journalism, directed by Eugene Goodwin, and its faculty and staff,. • Grid Stars Were Missed See Page' 4 FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers