TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1964 Polling Schedule Set for Today Centre County election poll ing places will be open from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. today. The Daily Collegian and local political party workers urge all students, faculty, and staff to mark ballots for the candidates of their choice in today's presidential election. Today is also the last day to submit absentee ballots to hometown precincts. Students who have not yet mailed their ballots to their local election board should do so immedi ately. 1 -1246W1211125311671(;;n' This careful editing, combined join a HUB , , with Williams' great acting skill, brought the characters and the 'atmosphere of mid-19th century committee .England to light in a, two and r nom; ~,,,, - 1 ,- . .,-k 1 one-half hour program with . i,• ,, t •-, EWgieverything from a spine-chilling THE FUND FOR THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION ANNOUNCES ITS TENTH ANNUAL FELLOWSHIP COMPETITION Rockefeller Brothel's Theological Fellowships Booth Ferris Ministerial Fellowships This competition is open to college seniors and graduate students who are undecided about the ministry and about seminary and who evidence those qualities of mind and character which the church expects of its ablest ministers. The fellowship grant offers one school year at any accredited Protestant semi nary: ...an opportunity to study theology and to examine thoroughly the demands and the opportunities of the ministry. ... a year to decide if this ought to be your vocation For further details concerning nomination, please get in touch with your campus representative Professor Luther Harshbarger The Nomination Deadline is November 20 THE SHOE k e.) i_ tv , , •;..... ,, , A,',7,,, ,, u.,,, (1 4? 1 PIAZ6,„k -1&"1,r 5 q . vi— s., WeV Vt -1 1 ' ~.,,‘ ," •-e's-. '-'.., -:' .. - .7Ext.'"'"•:-. • , rz- ( .: c . . 1144 - ' : ~,4 5-, , ,,,,A , ...7 g;;N: —, , 7....,,,-,.. 4 i N'-iFf -. , ..e , , .:',. :' *<4 :4 4 " 0 , ..,::',..,,, ~ .04 tt' t t.. .,, •••%';. l • . i , -. 4. ' t'... 4` +±vA , o 4:. : .e. .44 , ,';',.,;•,. „.. '' '''), .A. „ - '''t 4 .4 '' - •,, ~ ' ! t . id:`!"....',7:'1•41'.:t-z.,-1.7. ~11:1 0 Mg' S 1 $ A ~,i' re l 4t re r lk ii ( a * 1 "-faR, I :Rk-faR•4 l- 1. fiR ) I R-1 1 K- - )R - IR -.. ›A-fsgtet WEAR IT 1 Saturday evening from 7:30 to 9 P.M. in the HUB Ballroom for the Fashion Missfits Contest. Sponsored by the HUB Special Events Committee Dickens 'Lives' in Readings By CAROL POSTHUMUS By deleting and "telescoping"! characterizations and stories, Emlyn Williams has been able to bring Charles Dickens' works to life in his readings—he dem-I onstratcd his talent admirably: in performances for the Artists . Series in Schwab Friday and Saturday. In order to make the charac ters clear to the audiences— most of whom "were too young when they read Dickens to ap preciate his satire"—he had to condense the descriptions and plot line, Williams said, and he did it with no additions of his FITS suspense story, through sharp-,Williams' and Dickens' talents edged satires on high society, to: seemed unbeatable in revital a bedtime story which would izing literature which has grown keep a child awake through sheer fright. , old but not outdated. Speaking Silver According to the words of Especially effective was the some members of the audience, portrayal of the Podsnap family, more Dickens will be read and whose home was tastelessly fur - copies of his works given as I fished with silver plate which Christmas presents this year, as seemed to say "I am so many a result of Williams' perform oun c e s of precious metal,' once here. WOULDN'T you like to melt me down!" The mood changed as Williams Chess Team Wins enacted the story of pathetic Paul Dombey, a sickly, sensitive] child whose imagination was: The varsity chess team won stifled by his father's unfeeling the East ern Intercollegiate avarice. 'Chess Championship last week- "Mr. Bob Sawyer Gi ves a end at Cornell University, Itha- Bachelor Party" showed a group ca, of swaggering, slovenly medical / The team scoring results students, visited by Mr. Pick- were: Penn State. 17; Cornell, wick, who was routed out by the 10; Bloomsburg State College, nasty landlady and her assist- 10; American International ant, the timid but plucky Betsy. College. 8; and Farleigh Dick- In all the selections inson University, 6 1, 2 . transistions from narrative to' Two members of the Univer dialogue were handled smoothly sity's team, Robert Szendroi and without confusion. A sprink-, and Jerry Bergman, tied for ling of various British accents first place in the content. Sten added to the satire and authen- en Morford took third place; ticity of the stories. William Binney finished In sum, the combination of fourth, and Russell l-laag tenth. Pi Gamma Alpha APPLICATIONS FOR Meeting Thurs.—Nov. 5 "PENN STATE 7:30 P.M.—ill Temporary WOMAN" EDITOR ARE AVAILABLE AT Color Film: THE HUB DESK NOW "Renaissance in Italy" HERIOCHER'S RESTAURANT G`P N. THIS TUESDAY ,sk, (39 AND r . k*' .. , • e. ~ ~ .• 1 ..0 1 , ' te.: AUTOMATION , 7/ I , 7 CHEMISTRY AND METALLURGY DIAL GT&E FOR PROGRESS At GT&E, we've made diversification pay off in all-around growth. That's because we've concentrated on related fields of operation. For instance, yesterday's met allurgical advance is today's improved semiconductor and tomorrow's superior communications system. • This technological chain of events fol GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS 130 MU AVENUE NEW TOR lopu • 016 E SUOSIODUUES• laNni Optan Campus .n 32 stun • Clattil 11400,18 ENcumcs latcacculs • Gtatql freptat 8 Elentamo Internarcil • Gerval tiNphoni (Mowry Co. • Autamgc Wont • tenturi INciAt, • Wall Ellang 1%4= THE WORD . . FROM , s E ., , . . . .. ONLY- ;11 . I li :! ... - - s . • MOSE ALLISON TRIO TICKETS I SCHWAB AUD. $1.25 Saturday, Nov. 1, $1.75 JAZZ CLUB BOOTH: HUB 8100 P.M. NITTANY NEWS Bloodmobile Registration GROUND FLOOR OF THE HUB NOVEMBER 17-18 SPONSORED BY ALPHA PHI OMEGA AND GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA DEFENSE GENERAL AMMICS lows through the entire GT&E structure and accounts for our, continued progress in the field of total communications by sight and sound . radio and TV, voice and data transmission, automation and control. Through research, manufacturing and operations, GT&E has become one of "WHY SORORITY!" TONIGHT' 6:30 p.m. in Dorm Lounges . (Talks by Rush Guides about Sororities for all interested coeds.) NOVEMBER 2 - 6 • Register at the HUB November 2 thru 8. • Have a release form completed by your parents if you are under 21. No one under 18 can donate blood. e Bring the release form with you at the time of donation Nov. 17 or 18. k 'f ilf,* l4l l ll 477 .4tsglot*, ELECTRONICS i ,, . ,W . f. . America's foremost companies in terms of dollar sales, revenues, and diversity of products. As a young and aggressive company with no limit to its growth, GT&E is an organization you may wish to think of in the light of your own future. Instructions: sqp ,3WfbOTlt'Sk.sk. tsilkk ~y~~7 \ ®~ / :~ » ~ \ \~ % ~ \ • „A', ". aY .\~k..:30f GTE PAGE. THREE s , W*4