Soviets Hammer Flier's Duty VOL. 2. No. 20 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 19. 1960 VE CENTS Student Encampment Residences' Will Open Sept. 7 Supervision Reorganized Student Encampment, where 84 student leaders will meet with 30 members of the University's administration and faculty to anticipate, peruse and map out recommendations on various student and academic problems for the coming year, opens Sept. 7, at the University's School of Forestry at Mont Alto. Neatly tucked away in the mountain retreat, the encamp ment participants will be divided into six basic workshops—com munity living, Student Govern ment Association, University ex pansion and student welfare, aca demic affairs, rules and regula tions. and communications. Each workshop will discuss problems in its specific area of student life in five sessions dur ing the three-day meeting. Registration will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 7. Encampment will end Friday evening, Sept. 9. Workshop chairmen and secre-' taries will meet at 3 p.m. for a briefing, and the opening session; will begin at 3:30 p.m. The first. meal served at the camp will be•• dinner at 5:30 p.m. Encampment participants need-' ing transportation from State Col lege should contact William Ful-! ler, 202 HUB by Saturday, Aug.: 27. Drivers who can take extra' passengers should let Fuller know , by Sept. 1. Sleeping accommodations for coeds who wish to return direct ly from Encampment to the University on Sept. 9 may be obtained if the coeds write to the Dean of Women's office be (Continued on page three) Miller's Drama, Thurber's Comedy Finish This Week Two problems—one of al serious, one of a comical naH ture take the County stages this week as "All My Sons, by Arthur Miller and "The : Male Animal," by James Thurber and Elliot Nugent finish up their runs at the Boat Barn Theatre' and the Mateer Playhouse, re: tTectively. In its last week at the Barn' "Sons" deals with. the problem. of whether a man should put the. beliefs of his country against the welfare of his family, while, "Male Animal" concerns a pro -f lessor who gets into trouble when he reads a letter from an anarchist in one of his classes. The male runs through a fas cinating array of characters as! the professor takes the hard way: out instead of an easier one. Next week, both theaters present a different slant on plays,' as Mateer features '"Two for the Seesaw," which has only two; people in the cast—and a tele phone. The play is about Jerry ; Ryan, an Omaha lawyer who: comes to New York to get away from a stuffy marriage and falls' in love with Gitter Mosea, whoi has big ambitions as a dancer: . By JAY RAKE little talent and an ulcer. Ronald Collegian Reviewer Bishop, regular Playhouse cast, "The Male Animal" by member this summer and import! Yolanda Bartoli play the starring'James Thurber and Elliott (and only) roles. Nugent, this week's produe- Community Theatre's last play - of the season, "The Alchemist.' on at the Mateer Playhouse by Ben Johnson and adapted byl .at Standing Stone, is the Kelly Yeaton, features Hy Schultz and Bill Kotzwinkle. ' ;hilarious college-comedy .3f a pro- ,zs:', ,' , 1,.. ,e • • i'lif'', - , i:',',,i-i:e :,i. , 4 .. p-. , ..... _ , ~... 4 .z:e:- .-- - -- • _- 4 '.' I„,„a k • —Collegian Photo by Paul Lowe NEW ROAD TO STADlUM—University Drive begins to take shape on east campus. The new road is an extension of Park Ave. along the north end of campus that runs east to the future parking lot for the recently relocated Beaver Stadium, then turns south to College Ave. FOR A BETTER FENN STATE Review Mateer's Sure-Fire Success Tatirgiatt . , UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. Soviet Supreme Court he l repent- Returning coeds will find sev-'w____ ) Dag Hammars k• jo c i ca ii - 'ed his flight. vial changes in residence hall iiNH The pilot, who has pleaded ing in the fall. led in the chief UN representa- guilty to spying, said he re- An entire new staffing system tires of the BigF • vetted "very, very much" that • Out powers 'has been instituted by the dean!_ he had made the flight, and of women, Dr. Dorothy J. Lipp. (yesterday for a joint conf er- expressed belief he had done Graduate students and young , ence timed at keeping the his own country a "very ill women, known as senior counsel- service." ors, will replace the present ',Congo from collapsing into - Moscow radio, stress i ng the housemothers in the duties of pro - !chaos. flier's expressions of regret, told gramming and handling the coeds) its listeners this factor placed after 6 p.m. Reliable sources slat the U.N. Power apart, and made "a ( lear About half the housemothers isecretary-general 131 u n t 1 y told distinction between him and those previously employed will re- !them that Big Four unanimity who sent how , s _,ovie, , mitheri main under the new system but ; was imperative in order to avoid ties have made it clear their pri their duties will be limited to a drastic deterioration in the al-.mars i nterest i s in convicting U.S. daytime responsibility and rec- ; ready turbulent newborit African policy in the eyes of world opm ordkeeping. Irepublic. ion. A system of undertiraduate i African sources said that . The prosecution introduced ex junior counselors will -function: Hammarskiold also had warned . tmovync , ,rn i n „ p o , x . t rs l Africa's U.N. -representatives t'l 2 l ` „ ilan ' est, e, it, co you inme % t. and about one girl in evory 50 will be, within each living unit, Initially] that if disagreement persists with Premier Patrice Lumum- 'documents '' carried bypowers designated a junior counselor, which the prosecution apparently ba's Congo government, the . The function of the junior toun-; introduced to link him directly selor, according to Dean Lipp,! United Nations would have no to the U.S. Air Force. alternative but to pull cut the , . will be to bring the various t•esi-i This testimony seemed to be deuce programs down to the stu-1 more than 11,000 U.N. troops in leading up to a 'Soviet argu dent at t h e grass roots tevets. i the country. ment that the U.S. government i Hammarskjold and other U.N.; thus arousing more interest and and its military leadership de active participation on the part; officals made no secret of their, liberately carried out a policy of the students. concern over .- Y _, such incidents as which 'bore a risk of war. Four residence hall coordine esterday's savage attack by (on- The extent of Powers' repent tors will also function between g°l"---se army riflemen on a Cana- ant e seems to be an important ;titan U.N. unit at Leopoldville. air the dean of women and the indi- factor. } its Soviet defense counsel ; vidual residence halls. Each i port. A U.N. spokesman coin- Mikhail 1. Crinkly. told Powers coordinator will be in charge Imented that directives to U.N. f am ily a ft er th e day's pro c e e ding of an area of residences such i troops make clear they I'live tiw that the flier's behavior on the as Pollock, Simmons-McElwain, right to shoot in self.defense if . stan d an d hi s re p ea l, d expres etc. i attacked. • dons of regret and lepniitanee Another innovation in the wom-1 Summoned for the rare meeting raised hope that the court would (Continued on page three) ;that lasted 45 minutes were U.S. h e l en i en t w ith hi nt. --l Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. powers' spirits seemed to have ,Soviet Deputy Forien Ministerif a ll cn a s he finished his second lVasily V. Kuznetsov, British Min-'day of testimony, but he was chid 1, isler Harold Beeley and French longing some of the prosecution : Ambassador Armand Berard. witnesses. He had none of his own The U.N. secretary-general also to testify to his character or.to „held another group meeting with! his purpose in making earlier the ambassadors of Ecuador, Ar- : flights along the southern Soviet gentina, Ceylon and Tunisia : all frontier, nor to his reasons for smaller countries on the 11-nal icn'undertaking the ill-fated May 1 Security Council. flight across Soviet territory. The timing of another emergen- i The implication being made by fessor who gets involved with! ey ;some "pink C-minded trustees: meeting of the council on the Soviet authorities is that Powers - Congo hinged on the aryl.val here differs from his superiors because and a former All-American foot !of a delegation representing Lu- they—including President Eisen ;ball player. !mumba's central government. hower—expressed no regret. As a result of the lart;c atten- Idance of college-town people, thel story of the professor who wants: to read a letter by the famous "anarchist," Vanzetti, as an ex- ample of how beautiful broken English can be is sure-fire. Add the problem of a returning football hero who once loved the troubled professor's wife and you have almost the entire situation William Mooney plays the hap less professor who finally reacts to his troubles like a man and saves his pride and wife. Mooney starts slowly but is heading full steam by the second act when he drunkenly jells the literary mag azine's student editor all about the male animal. As the returning All• Ame rican, Ronald Bishop's antics are hilarious and give the entire production a lift. His rendition of the Statue of Liberty play is one of the funniest bits this sea son. ! David Frank plays the trustee out to rid the college of all "red" and "pink" professors with gusto and his continued question: ;`'What's more important than the new stadium?" repeatedly brings ;the house down. lOther excellent performances come from Peter E. Deuel as the present-day football hero who idolizes Bishop: Frank Browning las Dean Damon, the teacher who finally stops his policy of ap peasement to back Mooney and 1 (Continued on page four) Powers May Be Treated Easily By Soviet Court MOSCOW (W) The Soviet prosecution hammered per sistently yesterday on the theme that Francis Gary Powers knew in advance the full meaning of his U 2 flight over Soviet territory. But elsewhere, hints were dropped that the court would deal leniently with the American flier. The trial ....____ may end today. Hammarskjold time after time in the seecnd :day of the trial. technical w il : nesses repeated that the May I flight was planned' and "prt mcd- AsksUN Big Four p it 0 a , , , , ,. , , , , , ,, , .- c l i n ii l ict a i i: , t attempted 1) 1 1 ( 4 ) , I l i it s ilt military. To Discuss Congopox,...s . disagn‘ed with ! , oine the tet , limotly. But once more he 'told the military section of the Remick Gives Report On PSU Reactor Gatlinburg, Tenn.. Aug.. 1000 kilowatts. Pennsylvania State UniverHly This would greatly increase its more than doubling the sire of its value as a research tool. Tlw Na nuclear reactor laboratories to tional Science Foundation has meet increased demands, for re- awarded the University a $lO,- search and educational services, 000 grant to provide auxihary the University ReactOr Confer- equipment designed to increase ence was told here today. the efficiency of the reactor. Summing up five ye:;rs of op- Construction will begin nest oration of the Penn State Reactor:spring on a $440,000 addition to acting director Forrest J. Rerniclz house additional rt.e:ireh ides at the reactor. Funds will be •Thirty-five major research supplied by Pennsylvania's Gen proects are now underway at the oral State Authority. reactor. The Penn State Reactor has •The reactor has been used to proved to be exceptionally re train 175 scientists and t ngineei s • liable and "well - behaved," from 39 nations in the U.S. Atoms- Remick told the conference. for-Peace program. During the past year, it was •The reactor is the principal shut down and re-started 496 facility for the - University's ex-' times without incident. It is panding nuclear engineering ;•ro- presently operated at a rate of gram. one and one-half shifts, but •It is also the central 'facility will probably go to 2-shift op for conducting science teaching,: eration in the near future. It is institutes and special courses in occasionally operated on con radioactivity, reactor operation.' tinuous 100-hour cycles for spe and instrumentation. cific experiments. Remick said the power rating A bout 75 faculty. members and of the Penn State reactor was ,graduate students from the Col doubled to 200 kilowatts (heat lees of Agticalture. Elll2 inc( , ring output) in June, tind that con- and Architecture, Mineral Indus sideration is being given to in- tries. Chemi s try and Physics, and creasing the power rating to i (Continued on page Jour) By PRESTON GROVER
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