PAGE FOUR Elementary Teachers Current Openings Begin at $5,000. Go to $5,700 in 1965-66 Newark/ Delaware- Home of University of Delaware Campus Interviews— Tuesday, Nov. 24 Contact Educational Placement Office symmetry FROM $l2 5 AT THESE FINE STORES PENNSYLVANIA Allentown, Appel Jewelers Bethlehem, Finkelstein Jewelers Butler, Milo Williams Jewelers Chester, Morris Jewelers Easton, Bixler's Jewelers Grove City, Royal Jewelers Hamburg, Merritt Alexander Jeweler Hazleton, Fellin's Indiana, Luxenburg Jewelers Johnstown, Law's Jewelry Lancaster, Bash Jewelers Lansdale, Koehler's Jewelers Norristown, J. Ralph Shuler Norwood, Robert H. Atkinson Jeweler Philadelphia, U. Kalnins-Huntingdon Valley Pittsburgh, Grau Jewelers—Bellevue Pittsburgh, John M. Roberts & Sons—3 Stores Pottstown, Willauer Jewelers Quakertown, H. C. Kulp Jewelers Scranton, Ang. Clccofti's Jewel Case Sharon, Wenggler's Williamsport, J. S. Rudnitzki, Inc. MINNESOTA Erie, Richard F. Momr Jewelers Lebanon, Bash Jewelers MARYLAND Cumberland, Barnes Custom Jewelers OUR FUTURE IN COLOR TV LOOKS ROSY TV market is in full bloom— andGT&E along with it. i,Jhe reason? Our Sylvania subsidiary Kgs'made dramatic advancements in the performance standards of color TV sets, i'ln developingthese new receivers, Sylvania drew upon the vast research fa cilities of GT&E. One'result: the Sylvania GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS W 730IHIAQ AVENUE. MW YORK 10017 • Slit SU6MIAMSI Otwil Mjton* Oprjwj Compact a 32 two • Ocnml Itupijfi & (imicnc* Mmiciiti • & Eitcutw tMtmiMul •3. wral Ttitfhon* Ca. • Eleciw • itnkvn Eitctnc • SyStu Efcir* Puteo Singers To Present Campus Eighteen members -of the i Raymond H. Brown, associate Penn State Singers will present professor of music.’ folk songs of the Elizabethan! Accompanied by pianist Mary period on a two-day tour of the Hylbert (6th-music education- Scranton and Wilkes-Barre Com- State College) the Singers will monwealth campuses. I present three sixteenth century The group will leave Univer- Spanish Christmas carols and sity Park Monday morning and j selections from composer will perform that evening in l Thomas Weeiks, “O Jonathan” Scranton under the direction of'and ‘‘When David Heard” from JOBS IN EUROPE SUMMER and YEAR-ROUND The International Student Travel Center, New York City, offers students and teachers from 16 to 40, the opportunity to live the adventure of living abroad by providing job situations in Europe on a yearly or sum mer basis. The jobs—in construction, factories, hospitals, restaurants, hotels, and resorts, on farms and as camp counselors or mothers’ helpers— pay from $5O to $275 a month. ISTC attempts to match the individual to the job by guaranteeing one of four job choices. Transporta tion and home-stays can be arranged if desired, and orientation and guidance is provided in Europe. Most Jobs are in Great Britain or on the continent. For Free Brochure and/or $3 Annual Membership write to: INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER Dept. 1010, 39 Cortland St., N.Y., N.Y. 10007 “Color Bright 85” picture tube using a revolutionary new red phosphor that in creases brightness on the average of 43 percent over the industry standard. Our Sylvania Electronic Components Group is one of the two largest suppliers of receiving tubes and picture tubes ... used by 7 out of 10 TV set makers. ise tell me how you manage rake me look so great on campus, only thing I can't pass now jrowd of boys. Those vertical stretch pants follow the sleek line of most resistance. And guarantee the least resistance on campus. Then, total recovery (only the pants, Mr. Thomson, not the boys). The reflex action of your proportioned stretch pants is second only to the reflex action of that Psjch major I've had my eye on. And the fit! Mr. Thomson, please, how did you get them to (it so well? I adore you, Mr. Thomson! Best & Co. Ardmore, Pa. MR THOMSON PINTS S I'M.ll = 7201 /03. 5:. r '„ ] ■STRETCH NYLON, -OTc VIRGIN WOOL, IN: i □ IT KPLF. CREU.LI RED □ ULSTER EMERALD □ RRK.IIT BLI K □ Rl RMsIILD (.OLD PROPORTIONED SIZES = 7-201 S M |V|" AND I NDLRI 6 TO IS -7202 M,T <ST" AND 01 ER| S TO2O l CITY ADDKESS. 0C.0.D. □ CHECK ENCLOSED AMT. 5 In those areas w here cm or slate taxes are applicable, add amount of tax to price listed. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Concerts tLe New York Pro Musicia series. The program also in cludes two Vaughan Will'—as | arrangements, “The Turtle-' dove” and “Farmer’s Son bo Sweet,” a Cornish number, “I Love My Love” plus folksongs from Scotland, England and France. The Singers will repeat their performance Tuesday morning on the Wilkes-Barre campus. The tour is the second in a series of cultural exchange pro grams between University Park and Commonwealth campuses. The initial program sent the Don Kregs Quintet to five Com monwealth schools. The Singers concert serves a dual purpose as a part of a fund raising campaign to erect new buildings on the Scranton and Wilkes-Barre campuses. In late January members of the Singers, a group which num bers about 24, will participate in a state-wide tour. NEW COLLEGE, DINER Thomson... .please!” □ RUBVAT aoi.n t: CRISES' □ BROWV □ f.RFA □ BUCK .ZIP CODE As a major factor in al I phases of com munication through sight and sound, it is small wonder that GT&E has become one of America’s foremost corporations. If you’re looking for a young, aggres sive company with no limit to its growth, you may wish to view GT&E in the iight of your own future. GEE Exhibit Art Wor The paintings of two Univer-j sity professors are currently! being shown at exhibitions in the United States. A watercolor painting entitled “Rock Bar” by William Hanson, assistant professor of art, will be exhibited at the Rundel Gal lery, Rochester, N.Y. The exhi-j bition, “Contemporary Painting: Landscape,” organized by the Playboy or Workman? The “measure of a man” is not how much virginity he can consume, but how much virginity he can create! The Baptist Student Organization 1 t 1 _J i Professors ks Across Nation Penn State Shuman Gallery will continui through Nov. 28. Enrique Montenegro, assistant professor of art, is representet by two paintings in a travelinj exhibition “The Double Eight’ which is part of the collectioj of Fred Olsen of Guilford, Conn, Work by Montenegro was alst [reproduced in the current “Art [News Annual.” FOR KEELERS The University Bookstore, Inc. N E E D CHRISTMAS? A S H December 3 -10 Tom Jones and Fanny Hill were only two of the many 18th-century fictional characters who had trouble maintaining their virtue in a world that, it would seem, couldn’t care less. At one time or another, most of the period’s leading writers were preoccupied with the problem, and none more so than Daniel Defoe. After getting Robinson Crusoe out of his system, he in troduced Moll Flanders and, in 1724, a lovely young thing named Eoxana. Although not as well known today as Fanny or Molly, Roxana had a far more splendid career and certainly deserves equal billing. Starting as a penniless 22-year old widow with five children, she resorted to a course which, if not praiseworthy, is certainly successful. Becoming the toast of princes and lords and rich mer chants, Roxana was a courtesan who was frank enough to admit the advantages of her situation and woman enough to live a life of marvelous high adventure. You will meet her in Roxana : The Fortunate Mis tress (Dolphin, $1.25), “among the few English nov els,” Virginia Woolf once wrote, “which we can call indisputably great.” Turning to a more American pursuit, we commend to your attention a book entitled, v/ith sensibly descrip tive long-windedness, How To Be A Consistent W in ner In The Most Popular Card Games (Dolphin, 95c). John Crawford, one of the most successful card players of our day, doesn’t pretend to have written a book for the rank beginner. But for anyone with average skill at bridge, gin rummy, poker, pinochle, blackjack, or hearts, H. T. B. A. C. W. I. T. M. P. C. G. (as it is known around the office) should prove a very sound 95c investment. We introduce our final book for the month with its opening sentence: “Education is indeed the dullest of subjects and I intend to say as little about it as I can.” What Jacques Barzun does talk about in Teacher In America (Anchor, 95d) is teaching itself - the crucial process of communication in modern life, in and out of the classroom. And, since Professor Barzun is one of our most accomplished prose stylists as well as a great teacher, his book fully lives up to praise such as that supplied by the reviewer in The Nation: “The wittiest and most amusing as well as one of the sound est and most penetrating of books upon education that I have ever read.” Teacher In America' is* already widely-recognized as a classic, and it is avidly read by a larger audience every year. The three books reviewed above are published by the sponsors of this column, Doubleday Anchor Books, 277 Park Avenue, New York City and Doublcday & Company, Inc,, Garden City, New York. You’ll find, them all at one of the best equipped booksellers in the country your own college store. _L_ YOU $$ $ ■ FOR YOUR BOOKS Whether currently used at Penn State or not WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1964 GET MORE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers