PAGE FOUR PART TIME WORK—FULL TIME PAY $3OO A month's guaranteed income if you meet our require ments io applicants able to work from 6 to 10 P.M., or' devote mornings. /We are an international, educational organization building a newly created division and re quire a limited number of representatives to introduce the world-famous TEMAC-TEACHING MACHINE AND PROGRAMMED INSTRUCTION. * Look info this—it is greatl To arrange for a personal interview call Mr. Kepler at 238-8454 from 8 A.M. till 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednes day, or Thursday. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER • 1 . j Phi Sigma Sigma j 1 SHOE SHINE i • • | Today, 9:30 to 5 | 2 Tomorrow, 9:30 to 3:30 • • Foot Of The Mall | • • • 1 METZGERS For Your Student Needs Features A Large Selection Of Penn State Items Jackets Sweatshirts Tee Shirts Long & Short Sleeves Adults & Children's Penn State Souvenirs Student Supplies Books A MEMBER OF THE PENN STATE CO-OP f WITH FAST COURTEOUS SERVICE YOU CAN GET IT AT Metzgers Downtown Metzgers College Are. Next To The. Paoples Bank Campus Shopping Center HIS. ALLEN STREET 358 E. COLLEGE AVENUE THE STUDENT UNION '.FOR ■ • RACIAL EQUALITY j * SURE * Will Hold A Meeting 8:30 Tonight 213-214 HUB ARE PROUD TO BE CALLED PENN STATERS Unexi Concert Location Changed Harpsichordist Albert Fuller, presented by the Artist Series, will perform at 8:30 p.m. Fri day in Schwab Auditorium. Nina Brown, di rector of the Artist Series, announced the change of location due to the large demand for tickets. The concert had been scheduled for the Music Building. Mrs. Brown a Iso invited Friday’s audience to an open reception' on I stage after the per formance. The purpose of the reception, she said, is to provide an opportunity for the public to view Fuller’s unusual instruments at close range. The tickets, free to the student body, re-, main available from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the main desk of the Hetzel Union Building through tomorrow. Today is the last day for the sale of tickets to the general public. The harpsichord was popular two centuries ago and is currently experiencing a revival. Fuller will use three harpsichords Friday which were constructed especially for him by William Dowd, Boston, Mass. The basic design and scale of the instruments are derived from the mid-18th century production of Ihe Parisian Philosophy Department Sponsors Term Paper Award Competition The Department of Phil osophy will award two prizes this year for papers written on philosophical topics. The papers chosen for consider- THE DAILY-COLLEGIAN/ UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA >ected Ticket Demand harpsichord-builder, Pascal Taskin. Fuller is known as a concert and recording artist and scholar in both the United States and in Europe. At Yale University’s School of Music he won the Ditson Fellowship Award, allowing him to pursue his special interest in the keyboard music of the French Baroque and giving him the opportunity to do a year’s re search at. the Bibliotheque National, Pa,is. Returning to the States in 1955, he began his career as a concert artist and published an edition of the keyboard works of Gaspard Le Roux. His solo records include the works of Rameau and 51 Scarlatti sonatas for Cam bridge records. Fuller has appeared at the University of California, Berkeley, and Cleveland Museum of Art, the Library of Congress, Washington D.C., the University of Buffalo, the Metropolitan Mu seum of Art, New York City, The first solo harpsichordist to appear at Lincoln Center’s Philharmonic Hall, he will make his debut appearance with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra in April. Fuller is also known in music circles in London, Paris and Amsterdam. ation in the competition will be from term papers written for philosophy courses in the fall and winter terms. There will be two steps in the com petition. First, the professors teach ing courses involving term , papers will choose one paper from each of their courses in these two terms. At the be ginning of the Spring Term, a committee composed of members of the philosophy faculty will meet to consider the papers submitted and will divide them into two classifications. . • Those written for 200 level courses and under. • Those written for 300 and . 400 level courses. One paper from each of the two classifications will be singled’ out for the prize. There will then be a public presentation sometime in the Spring .Term at which the $5O prize will be awarded to each of th'fe winners. If The project can he con ' tinued, next year’s compe tition will include papers from Spring Term of this year, and, the Fall and Win ter Terms of next year. The conception of the prizes was generated by the avail Horticulture Senior Manages Annual Show One. of the busiest young men on campus this week is Ray A. Grumbine, 20-year-old senior, oLMyerstowh, ;as he keeps all the machinery'working smooth ly toward the 53rd annual Hort Show, Oct. 29-30. A major in horticulture end a member of the Horticulture Club, he is general manager of the show, which will be a fea ture of the annual Homecom ing program. . . With the theme, “Horticul ture Through the Seasons,” the show, Grumbine said, will “be •the best ever.” ' ’ "We’re expecting 15,000 to 20,000 persons to. see the dis plays of vegetable gardens, ornamental plant propagation and, floral Christmas decora tions.” Grumbihe, reared on a small dairy, and truck farm in Leb anon' county, has plenty of experience with greenhouses. His grandfather started a A LIMITED NUMBER OF LOCAL BOOKINGS ARE AVAILABLE BY CALLING ROBIN 466-6686 ability of some monies from the College of Liberal Arts. The source of the funds was contributions from alumnae who stipulated that the money was to be used for .stu dents in the College of Lib eral Arts. V : The new philosophy prizes are a part of the program of the philosophy department and other departments to give more recognition to in tellectual achievement. The prizes are the third contribu tion which the Department of Philosophy has made to this program. Since 1958 the de partment has awarded the Ray H. Dotterer Award, giv en each year to a promising philosophy major. The second project of the department was the formula tion of an Undergraduate Philosophy Club. Membership in this club is restricted to those elected by. the phil osophy faculty on the basis of excellence of the student’s work in philosophy. The club serves as an extra-classroom opportunity for the further philosophical development of those students who have demonstrated their interest and their capabilities in the philosophical discipline. commercial greenhouse nearby 45 years ago. His father main tained the business and Ray now has his own well-developed green thumb. Grumbine was active in (he Lebanon County 4-H program for six years before beeinning his colege work at the Schuyl kill Campus at Pottsville. His specialty was beekeeping and he still works.at it during his between-terms vacations. At the University, he lives on campus in special facilities near the research greenhouses. He is specially assigned to keep constant check on the flowers during the colder nights of the year. ’, Grumbine plans to join his father in the family greenhouse business after completion of his education. “I might like to go into the retail florist shop business; too, some day,” Grumbine. said. ' The toughest thing for a life long horticulturalist to do is name a favorite flower. Considering the thorny prob lem, Grumbine said, ‘‘The rose. Red rose.” Activities do count! \ Apply Now for Chairmanship of; High School Speakers Program College Bowl Spring Arts Festival i I UNDER EDUCATIONAL AFFAIRS COMMISSION . of USG i Applications available at the , HUB desk "Can Art Still Communicate" r . ' Announcing a Competition In Commissioned Art Two $lOO Prizes ’ . Come to , THE HOME EC LIVING CENTER > Friday, October 21 8 p.ith x Hear nod Participate in Dialogue with Profs K.' Beittel and S; Robertson On "CAN ABSTRACT ART CONVEY A CHRISTIAN MESSAGE" , Competition Rules will-be announced (Sponsored by the Syracuse Community ~. . . P.O. Box 72, Stale College) PARLEZ-VOUS FRANCAIS? Well if you do or you don't, the department of French,is sponsoring a special one-night performance of the French play "Les Femmes Savantes" at Schwab Auditorium on Nov. 22. The play will be performed French Theatre Group To Stage Moliere Play For those who couldn’t make Paris this up with the Joneses’,” says Gerald J. Brault, summer, the department of French is bringing bead of the department of French, which a little bit of Paris to them. is sponsoring the show here. The distinguished French theatre company, Brault said tickets for the performance Le Treteau de Paris, has been scheduled for a would & on sale at the Hetzel Union Building one-night performance of Moliere’s classical string on November 1, with admission to comedy “Les Femmes Savantes” (The Learned lhe P ublic set at & 1 - 50 and students at 51.25. Ladies) on November 22 at Schwab Auditorium. Unanimously acclaimed throughout France It will mark the second appearance at a "d Europe and hailed by the London Times as the University for the Company which has ® outstand / ng p ™ duc ‘ on ’. the , p , lay deal * , . .a n ... c . . . „ 1 with a single, mother-dominated family of been visiting the United States on an annual t ® , , t , L . . J , . . - neo .. ,u . e . x arty pseudo-intellectuals beset with extravagant basis since 1958 under the auspices of the * \ French Government. Last year it appeared sno . here on October 24 as part of the Artists’ J Whpther pe , rf ° rmed ln p f lod costume or g er - es . modern dress, Moliere is as devastating today as he was in 1672, M Brault says. The play, written in 1672, has been re- Since the play js being performed in staged, for the 20th century in an effort to give Frenchi the department is providing copies today’s audiences the equivalent of what of an annotated edition of the origSnal text Moliere gave the 17th century play-goers, a for 60 cents> Copies , vin also be availab i e at humorous view of life in the midst of a middle the door the night of lhe performance, class family of snobs. The Penn State performance is one of “Moliere’s work remains timely, for it more than 150 scheduled coast-to-coast by satirizes the still popular notion of ‘keeping the company for its 1966-67 American tour. Placement Interviews West Va Pulp & Paper Co, Nov 2, BusAd, Chem, ChE, For Mgmt, lE, LA, Mkts, MBA American Can Co, Nov 3 & 4, Acctg, Chem, Physics, Most engr majors, Any ma|or for .sales Anchor Hocking Glass • Corp, Nov 3, Acctg, Bus Adm, CerE, ChE, CE, EE, lE, Mrkt, ME, Prod Mgmt, Pers Boeing Co, Nov 3 & 4, AerospE, CE, EE, EngrMech, EngrSc, ME Chevron Chem. Ortho Dlv, Nov 3, Most ag majors, Chem, ChE Corning Glass Works, Nov 3, PhD In Cer, CerE, Chem, ChE, EE, Geol, MatSc, Math, ME, Metal, Physics Koppers 8. Sinclair-Koppers Cos, Nov 3, Chem, ChE, CE, EE, ME, MetE Pittsburgh Plate Glass, Nov 3 & 4, Acctg, BusAd, CerE, CerTech, Chem, ChE, CE, Econ, EE, EngrMech, Engr Sc, lE, Labor Econ, .LA, ME, Pers, Mgmt, MBA, Grad degrees In solid state tech Pittsburgh Plate Glass,-Chem Dlv, Nov 3 & 4, ChE, CE, EE, ME, Trans, Grad degrees In Chem, PhD In CerE Reliance Elect & Engr Co, Nov 3, EE, , EngSc, lE, ME TRW Inc, Nov 3, ChE, EE, ME, Metal, Undersea OrdE Westlnghouse Elect Corp, Nov 3 & 4, CerE, ChE, EE, EngMech, EndSc, lE, ME, MetE, Math, NucE, Physics California State Gov, Nov 4, CE Ingersoll-Rand Co, Nov *4, lE, ME PhUco Corp, .Comm & Electron Div, Nov 4, CEi EE,, Electron Physics, Math, ME Texaco, Sales, Nov 4. Most malors Alan Wood Steel Co, Nov 4, BusAd, lE, - Metal, Any major for sales by the distinguished French Theatre com pany, Le Treteau de Paris, and although completely in French, annotated copies of the French text will be available at the door. Organizational Plans Made For WUS Week Activities The World University Service is beginning to plan its actiyities for WUS Week, January 18-27. 'According to Publicity Chairman Kathleen Diggs (10th general arts and sciences-Wallingford), the organization hopes tq ■ bring a speaker on international education to campus f to visit the residence areas, fraternities and soror ities. Committees are being formed for publicity, education, solicitation, and special events. Funds collected during WUS Week will be used to help develop universities around the world. Rev, Joseph Ban is the group's advisor. Anyone who wants to help organize and plan the campaign is asked to call Rebecca Walker, Martin Glen, or the University Christian Association. NOTICE STUDENTS UNDERGRADUATES and GRADUATES Additional part-time personnel needed to work as student Campus Patrol officers. Here is an opportunity for a permanent part-time job while t t you are in school. Work schedule involves day, night and weekend assignments. Tailored to fit your class and study schedule. CALL PATROL OFFICE 865-6380 or 865-5458 1 “AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER” 11l is a touch of Bavaria 111 is mature taste 111 is reliable service 111 is traditional styling 111 is fine fabrics 111 is a beam ceiling 111 is a reserved atmosphere 111 is a wide selection 111 is a friendly greeting 111 is personal attention ill is an artistic window 111 is a ready cup of coffee 111 is a breath of Tyrol THE. ONE ELEVEN SHOP THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1964 i 111 So. Pogh Sf.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers