The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 03, 1964, Image 3

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    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
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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
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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 <t•
EVERY TUESDAY
ALL the PANCAKES
YOU CAN EAT
For 65c
with Maple Syrup and Butter
Free and Easy Parking in the Rear
Located Across From South Halls
At 418 E. College Ave.
iii
6.,
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
Placement Interviews
Interviews with the following B. F. Goodrich Company, Nov. 19, (MS &
D only) Chem, ChE, ME, Math,
Ph
firms may be requested by sub- Phys.
mitting an appointment card' Westinghouse Electric C0., - Nov. 19, EE,
and personal information sheet ME, lE, Metal, E Sc), E Mech, Phys,
at 128 Temporary Classroom Math, 'ChE, Nuc E, Cer T, Bus Ad,
LA, MBA
Building at least 10 days prior Thompson, Ramo, Woolridge, Nov. 19,
to the interview date. Curricu- Metal, ChE, ME '
lum refers to the majors de - Navy Department, Nov. 19 & 20, EE,
ME, Aero E, CE
sired by the firm. Union Bag Camp Paper Co., Nov. 19,
Dow Chemical Co., Nov. 16, Phys, Chem,' ChE, ME, lE, Chem.
ChE, ME, IE, Any curriculum for sales. Hercules Powder Co., Nov. 19 & 20,
Union Carbide Chemical Co., Nov. 16,1 (RID only) Chem, ChL, L
Cheri), ChE, ME, IE, EE, CE.
Pittsburgh National Bank, Nov. 16, Any
degree
Worthington Corporation, Nov. 16, ME,
ChE, EE, Metal.
Federal-Mogul-Bower Bearing Co., Nov.'
16, lE, ME, LA, Bus Ad, Metal, Acctg.l
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Technical Cen-i
ter, Nov. 16, Chem, Phys, Aero E, ME,'
Metal.
Cabot Corporation, Nov. 16, (MS, PhD
only) Chem, ChE, Phys.
Corning Glass, Nov. 16, (MS, PhD only);
Chem, Phys.
Armco Steel, Nov. 17, lE, Metal, EE,:
ME, Chem, ChE, Phys.
Pennsylvania State Civil Service Corn- 1
mission, Nov. 17 & 18, Any degree I
Agway (Coop. Glf. & Eastern States,
Farmers Exchange), Nov. 17, Any Ag
degree
Public Health Service, Nov. 17, CE,I
SE, ChE, Chem, Phys.
Norwich Pharmacal Company, Nov. 17,E
Chem, Microbiol, Scl, Biol Sci.
Hammermill Paper Co., Nov. 17
Lever Brothers, Nov. 17, Chem (PhD,i
only)
College Life Ins. Co., Nov. 17, Any degree
Naugatuck Chemical (Div. of U.S. Rub
ber), Nov. 17, ChE, Chem (Graduate
level only).
U.S. Steel Corp, Nov. 17, Cer T, CE,
ME, ChE, Arch E, Chem, EE, Metal,'
Phys, MM Prep, Bus Ad., Acctg.
Alcoa, Nov. 10, lE, ME, ChE, Metal,
EE, Acctg., Chem, LA
Diamond Alkali Company, Nov. 18, Chem,
ChE, Acctg.
Weather Bureau, U.S. Dept. of Commerce,
Nov. 18, Meteo, EE, ME, CE, Phys,
Math.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co, Nov. 18,'
Metal, Cer T, Chem, ChE, Math, EE,
Phys.
Strawbridge & Clothier, Nov. 18, Any
curriculum
The California Company, Nov. 18, PNGE
Rockwell-Standard, Nov. 18, ME, lE,
Bus Ad.
Lever Brothers, Nov. 19, Bus Ad, LA
Xerox, Nov 18, PhD only-Phys, Chem
Potomac Edison, Nov. 18, EE, ME
Swift and Company (Research & De
velopment), Nov. 19, Chem, Biochem,
ChE, ME
National Security Agency, Nov. 19, EE,
lE, Aero E, Math
WILATS
NEW
ENT THE NOVEMBER
ATLANTIC?
Canada: A Special Supplement dis•
cusses segregation, the new Canadian
leadership, Canada's struggle for
unity, tier authors and painters. Timely
articles on: What Is Canada?, Can
French Canada Stand Alone?, The
Trouble with Quebec, Canada as a
Middle Power, Education: Past and
Future, The Dilemma of the Canadian
Writer, and other subjects.
"Pomp and Circumstance: C. P.
Snow" by RobertAdams:An appraisal
of Sir Charles' writings, his new book,
Corridors of Power, and his contnbu•
lion to the two•cultures dialogue.
"Labor's Mutinous Mariners" by
A. H. Raskin: A report on the rivalry
between Joseph Curran of the National
Maritime Union and Paul
Hall of the Seafarers Inter.
national Union. ~*44
Every month the
Atlantic provides a
platform for many
of the world's most
articulate and crea
tive men and women.
The result is always
entertaining and in.
formative, often brit•
liant, occasionally
profound. More and
more, the Atlantic is
finding its way into
the hands of discern
ing readers. Get your
copy today.
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' te.: AUTOMATION , 7/
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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
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ONLY-
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. •
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:
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