The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, August 23, 1960, Image 1

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VOL. 2. No. 21 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. TUESDAY MORNING. AUGUST 23. 1960 FIVE CENTS
Car Parking
' ules Set
For Fall
Students will no longer be able
to park their cars in, the Hetzel
Union Parking Lot at any time,
according to the parking regula
tions issued for the fall semester.
However, the parking lot be
hind Simmons and McElwain
Halls, and the western half of the
lot just north of the new Wom
en's Athletic Field, formerly
closed to students, will now be
open for student parking after
regular daytime hours.
Two new lots along Pollock
Road beside the new women's
residence halls will also be open
to after-hours student parking.
These major changes along
with a few others were effected
by a general provision in the
recently revised parking and
traffic regulations which says
students may park after regu
lar
hours in all lots outside the
area bounded by Burrowes, Cur
tin and Shortlidge Roads, but
not on or along these three
roads.
Regular daytime hours are 7
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 7 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Saturday.
Lumumba has moved from one
extreme to another in his stormy
career as the leader of this cha
otic, newly independent nation'.
Lumumba was in telephone
contact with Deputy Premier
Antoine Gizenga, an extreme'
nationalist who heads the Con
golese delegation at the U.N.
According to Comoicse officials,
GizHiga was static . ied with the
way the situation developed.
Cizenga reportedly !;tressed that
"no one at the Sr cut iIY Council
said that the government of the
Congo vas WYOllc."
The government of secessionist
I Katanga province als-o welcomed
The men's units of the new; • 1..-- ithe outcome of the !--;eti
crily Conn
;Pollock Area residence halls Rosenberger .Gets ~ „il session. P r': in
.i c r Moise
;Tshombe's, regime .paid in a CO M.
will be named after Pennsyl- e • I • ,rnunique issued at Elisabethville,
vania counties in a series of purloin Schoiarsnip IKatanga's capital, that it retains
Eicanore Rosenberger, nThior in ,
'faith in the U.N. and would wet
jdedication ceremonies from come Honinviril , ,jold if lie Cho s e
home economics from Uniontown, - •
20 to Dec. 1.40 make another visit there.
( Sept.was, recently named the first re-!
' Fourteen counties wiil he rec-'ciPient of the newly established HUB
, Art Exhibit Shows
ognized by the conferring of. J '
ship osepnine Cramer Durbin Scholar-
!Newly Awarded Works
names on "house" units of the
8-story Pollock A building and, The scholar hip carries a sti-! The art exhibit currently fea
;pen(' of 5100 and is to be awarded lured in the exhibition area on
the 6-story Pollock B and C build- annually to a girl majoring in' the main floor of the Iletzel Union
'ings, which will open their doorsJhome economics on the basis of Building is an honors show fen
for the first time in Seutember;financial need, quality of aca-'tuning work of :Ainuner sessions
to 1000 men. demic work and character. lartists who won awards during
.., i The award was established this,ihe recent competition.
Mercer County will he th e !spring by Mrs. Durbin, who is ;.0 Two or three works of each
, first recognized when the +graduate of the University and aartist, chosen as icuresentative ar.
.
The Seesaw' .
, •-
v. eighth floor of Pollock Ais ded- imember of the Home Economic 'his work, will be on exhibit till
e
icated as "Mercer House" on Council. Aug. 31.
Sept. 20.
---- .
Lancaster ' County will follow' .
_by Playhouse on Sept. 22; York, Sept. 23; and
;Chester. Sept. 27.
. j
Human nature is spotlighted inj in the Allenberry production of l Other units to be dedicated dur
different ways th,.-t week at the' "Bells Are Ringing" is making l ing the fall _include, Lycoming.
(Lebanon, Northampton \N. ash
r -
I her first appearance at Mafeer
County's summer theatres, as the
l ing en, Beaver and Fayette in Oc
-1 this season. Her experience in-
Mateer Playhouse at Standing eludes off-Broadway produc- j ,
tober • Northumberland, Mifflin) See Picture Page 5
Stone presents "Two For The See-1 lions and work with the Amen- andl Cumberland in November,
, • i The high-powcr nuclear reactor; ties for research and graduate
saw," the story of a boy, a girl and can Theatre Wing. land Clearfield in December.
The county commissioners and -
'-1 Quehanna has been handed ,
l training," he said.
a telephone, and the Boal Barnl Mr. Bishop is already well -J I Walker said that the Curtiss-
Summer Theatre at Boalsburglknown to county audiences for his other guests have been invited to over without cost or commitmentlwrjght reactor w ill fulfil a nerd
features, "The Alchemist," ajperformances in the Mateer pip-;participate in the dedication cure -
to the University by the Curtiss i l which the University has for some story of Shakespearean con-men.jductions of "The Gazebo," "Almonies for each unit. Wright Corporation. time included in its long-range
"Seesaw," by William Gibson,iStreetcar Named Desire," "Play-, In the 8-story Pollock A i „,
I.cells and au \ iluTv facili
features Ronald Bishop and Yo-;boy of the Western World," "Visit; building each floor, housing 66 1 "°-
landa Bartoli as Jerry Ryan and i To a Small Planet," and "The! students, wi 11 constitute a lis, at the remote Curtiss-Wrightj The University h •o h b at i to pos,t
.
Gitter Mosca, a lawyer and aiMale Animal." I house. In the 6-story buildings :Research Center, 30 miles north-!
would-be ballerina with an ulcer "Alchemist," by Ben Johnson,
I two floors, housing a total of 75 ;west of State Collff2,e, were a 1 pone some of its reeareh proj
eCtS because the campus reactor
who meet, fall in love, argue and; adapted by Kelly Yeaton, is' students, will make up one given! to the University. lacked the neceary protective
make up and reluctantly parethe story of an alchemist and his) house. . 1 Commenting on the Universi-!acreage as required by the Hai-
Hailed as an outstanding study in!multifaced "straight man," who) A study hall will provide a; ty's sudden acquisition of the ards Branch of the Atcinic Ener
human nature, the play containsjdeceive gullible beleivers with, meeting place for each house unit. valuable nuclear research facili-4;y Commicsion,
both warmth and comedy. Itlpromises of the Philosopher'slTwo maps one of the Common-;ties, President Eric A. Walker' "There is suffi c i e n t : : :f3tce
started last night and runs throughiStone, the Queen of Elfland andiwealth which will highlight the said, ''This will give us the best,"around the Quehanna reactor tri
Saturday. 'magic elixirs. 'county and another enlarged map nuclear laboratory in the East "
,p rov i d e complete operational
Miss Bartoli, - who recently I. A lawyer's clerk, a tobacco-,of the county itself will hang( "It will be a significant ad- safety, vet it is acce , zsible to sei
played the role of Ella Peterson (Continued on page five) i (Continued on page four) i dition to the University's faiiii• i (Continued - on pew fii,:e)
The new rule also means that
areas on A g Hill. North Halls and
Nittany areas Mill now be opened
to student parking. The lot north
of the Library (Area 70) and the
lot south of Recreation Hall (Area
11) will remain open to students.
The area in front of Recreation
Hall will be closed to students.
To operate an automobile on
campus or park in a lot on cam
pus after hours, a student must
purchase a $5 registration stick
er.
A sls sticker entitles him to
park at any time in the lots on
the eastern fringe of campus from
Nittany to behind Turf Plot resi
dence halls.
A new parking area is being
readied for students at the cor
ner of Entrance Road and Curtin
Road across from the Turf Plot
residence halls and the Univer
sity flower gardens, according to
Captain John F. Galaida, chief of
the campus patrol.
New stickers are being used for
the first time this fall. The new
stickers will be placed on the
front and rear bumpers of the
vehicle.
Four different colors will indi
cate free registration (not good on
campus), paid registration, park
ing permit or special permit.
`Two For
Presented
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FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
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AERIAL VIEW shows completed Pollock Area residence halls, which will open doors to 2000 stu
dents in September. At left center is the dining hall with four women's residenCe halls grouped
around it. At right center are three men's halls. Vacant area in center will be made into recreation
area. At lower right is McElwain Hall. New married student housing is at upper left.
Men's
To Be
400 Rainbow Girls
Attend Classes \%
About 400 girls of the Order
of the Rainbow for Girls arc at
tending classes at the University
for three days this week. The girls
arrived Sunday afternoon.
The classes, taught by Univer
sity professors, are held in the
mornings and the afternoons.
Recreational programs are plan
ned for the evenings.
About 3500 more girls will ar
rive tomorrow afternoon for the
4-day Rainbow Grand Assembly.
Tatirgiatt
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tate
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Pollock Residence Halls
Named Ater Counties
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Backs 'own
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University Given Reactor
From Curtiss-Wright Corp.
LE'OPOLDVII,LE, the Congo
(in—Premier Patrice Lumum
ba's government backed down
yesterday and dropped its 'ef
forts to force Secretary-Gen
eral Dag Hammarskjold to
revise UN operations in -the
The VOVernMelll reven , ed itself
after the Security Council, meet
ling in New York. in effect real
! firmed the secretary-general's pol
icy
in conducting the U.N. mili
,tary and civilian aid program.
A spokesman issued the news
following- a three-hour confer•
! ence of Lumumba and the
sil
ver-haired Soviet ambassador
to the Congo, Mikhail D. Ya
' kovlev.
The government "sees no rea
son to press its denuinds," said
the spokesman, Serge Michel, a
left-wing Frenchman of Russian
origin who is Lumumba's chief
press aide.
"The government is satisfied
that Belgian soldiers will be with
drawn. The government considers
the atmosphere good."
The demands, voiced by Lu
mumba last week, included with
drawal of all white soldiers from
the Congo. a supply of U.N. planes
to speed Congolese soldiers to in
terior trouble spots, and Ihe ap
pointment of a 14-nation African-
Asian commission to advise Ham
morskjold.
Evidently referring to the‘,
Soviet Union, Lumumba had
threatened to appeal to another
power unless the Security
CoUncil bowed to his demands.
It was clear that the. Security
Council's tacit approval of the
policy pursued by Hiinimarskjold
has played a major role in influ
encing the stand of the Lumumba
regime.
t.kj