WEDNESDAY. APRIL 12. 1961 Chekov's 'Three Sisters' To Open at Centre Stage The Penn State Players will begin a six-week run of Anton Chekhov's classic drama, "The Three Sisters" on Friday night at Center Stage. The play will run every weekend until May 20 and will be directed by Warren Smith, who has been associated with Dennis' Duties Taken by Cutler, Staff Members Duties have been reassigned in the department of academic af fairs because of the six month leave of absence granted to Law rence E. Dennis to serve in the Peace Corps, Wilmer E. Ken worthy, executive assistant to the President, said Monday. Responsibilities formerly held by Dennis, who was vice presi dent for academic affairs, and Dr. Howard Cutler, newly named as sistant to the President for aca demic affairs, will be divided among Cutler and other staff members, Kenworthy said. Com mittee responsibilities will be as signed to vice-chairman and oth er committee members. Dr. Paul M. Althouse, assistant director of resident instruction in the College of Agriculture has been named acting director of General Education. Althouse has served as an assistant to Cutler in the area of general education. C. R. Carpenter, director of the division of academic research and services will represent the presi dent on all committees and proj ects concerned with television and radio. R. B. Dickerson, associate dean and director of resident instruc tion in the College of Agriculture will be chairman of the adminis trative committee on resident ed ucation procedures. Ben Euwema, dean of the Col lege of the Liberal Arts, will be chairman of the policy committee for the Center of Continuing Lib eral Education. Other assignments will be made as the new positions develop, Kenworthy said. Article by Prexy Published President Eric A. Walker is the author of an article, "Engineers and/or Scientists," published in the February issue of Journal of Engineering Education. factory authorized VOLKSWAGEN Sales Paris Service $1 624.00 WYNO SALES CO. 1960 E. 3rd SL Williamsport FROTH . . . • .., • . . „ , '..-::.. •••• -... •••••• .. - ~... ....... ~•,, .. . • .. •• • •••- -..•--..• .r. .',.'...-.• ::..,.... ...... ..... •• - '' ... .. . .., ,-,._..-...-.. •. , • ..•••••••••••.:.• •.:•.,..-. ~: ..... • . , •- - .• . ~,. ~ , • ...,. • • - ',...,,,'.• ••.:. . • . . •• ~ .... . .„..... .• ..• .... ...... ~ ~. ..:..:,. . . . ....•.,..•,... •. . _.... ~... • . •••• . . .. ...:• ••::. , . ..•..,,,..... . ..:..„........:.... ....,. ... • ,•••.....:•......., .. i .......... :__..,•,.. ••• :..:........ .. ......... ..,.. ..• ...,_ „ ON SALE FRI. By ANN PALMER the Mateer Playhouse at Standing Stone for several years. Tickets for the opening week end are sold out but tickets for other performances may be ob tained at the Hetzel Union desk or at Center Stage on the night of the performance. Smith has been noted in the past for his direction of plays of such modern masters as IbSen and Shaw. "The Three Sisters" is a play' about three accomplished young ladies who feel their lives stifled in a small Russian town, The goal' of the play is to describe their achievements in overcoming this, feeling and seeking adventure in l life. Olga, the eldest sister and an, unhappy, unmarried schoolmis tress, will be played by Grace; Shearer, junior in arts and letters, from Perulack; Masha, the middle: sister and an unhappily married, high-school teacher will be played: by Penelope Gray, junior in thea- 1 ter arts from Berea, Ohio; and Irena, the youngest and most rest-, less sister will be portrayed by, Susan Young, sophomore in home' economics from Pittsburgh. The play is a portrayal of the, constant frustration of these three: girls and the quenching of their. desires for excitement. The lyric of the play provides a comparison. unintended by the author, of the, society of Russia in 1900 and the present day society of the world today. Suicides are most common in, the month of April and spring is the season of greatest frequency. AT THE HILLEL FOUNDATION TV-FORUM Thursday, April 13 8 p.m. Armstrong-Circle Theater film "ENGINEER of DEATH" The Life and Deeds of ADOLPH EICHMANN Commentator: Rev. Samuel Gibson Director, University Christian Association THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Ulsh States Dress Policy For N. Halls In order to be admitted to Warnock Dining Hall, from now on, residents of the North Halls area must be dressed neatly and presentably, Wayne Ulsh, president of North Halls Council, said Monday night at a council meeting. The Dress Code, which stated rules for dining hall dress and the enforcement of them was made up by the council. At a popular election the men of the area voted to do away with this code, main ly because of a clause banning dungarees at all meals. Dining hall dress will now be according to the rules stated in the pamphlet distributed by the Dean of Men's Office, "Guide to Residence Hall Living." According to this publication, dress must be neat and present able. Dungarees may be worn to meals except, on Sundays. Coats and ties are requested, but not required, for Sunday noon meals. The Dean of. Men's office will enforce these rules. It was rumored that the council had met Saturday to discuss the Dress Code further, but this ru mor is false, Ulsh said. In other business, Ulsh an nounced that new officers will be elected by council members at the next meeting, April 24. Petitions for those who are run ning for office should be turned in to Ulsh by April 20 with at least 50 valid signatures on them. Howell Elected Society Officer Dr. Benjamin F. Howell, Jr., professor of geophysics and head of the department of geophysics and geochemistry, was elected second, vice president of the Seis mological Society of America at its annual meeting in San Diego, Calif., recently. PARODY Early Spirit Post-Revolutionary art re flects the spirit of its period, Dr. Harold Dickson, professor of the history of art and archi tecture, said at the Liberal Arts Lecture Series last night. By this statement, Dickson was illustrating a thesis,, that in the period after the Revolutionary War, from the time of George Washington to Andrew Jackson American art was unusually sensi tive and responsive to the times. Neither before nor after this period was art so atuned to what was happening politically and socially. By•use of a collection of color slides received at the Univer sity last year, he was able to present to his 'audience what this meant. These slides are a few of the 2500 purchased from over 4000 other slides on Amer ican art assembled by the Car- CREDIT STAFF MEETING ZTA Suite Pollock 5 CRADLE BEACH CAMP For Handicapped & Physically Well Children Near Buffalo, N.Y. Will interview Men on campus for positions as cabin counselors, on April 17, from' 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Information and applications, The Office of Student Aid, 218 Willard Building. Opportunity of a Young Lifetime Become a STEWARDESS with U.A.L. You can benefit from •meeting people and traveling throughout the U.S Onon-routine and interesting work We'll benefit from • your poise, tact and graciousness •your willingness to put forth your best efforts If an airplane flying career inter ests you, contact your placement officer now for a campus inter view on April 19. Art Mirrors of A merica negie Foundation. This new art dealt with history in the making, continued Dickson, and it found a fertile field in the United States. The formulation of political parties launched art on a basic theme. With the use of the ballot becoming more wide spread, paintings began to depict the growing interest of the peo ple in politics, Dickson said. Before 1800, he continued, portrait painting was so. popu lar, that there existed what could he called "a population explosion of portraiture.". Pain ters concentrated their efforts on statesmen, with Washington "running like a theme song" throughout the era. Changes in the painters' themes coincided with changes in Ameri ca herself. These men have left us with a clear picture of what America was like. almost two centuries ago plus a conception of the pride imbued in the people in their newly founded nation, Dickson concluded. TONIGHT 7:30 p.m. PAGE THREE rt--~~t. UNITED,