PAGE EIGHT Play Shop Gives S Student One- ct Stage Productions The College Playshop of the iramatic Division presented a stu dio production at the Little The atre Wednesday night. The' plays given were "The First Dress Suit" by Russel Medcr a f t, "Cottie Wiourns" by Patricia McMullan, and "The Old Lady Shows Her IMAals" by James M. Barrie, which was repeated Thursday at 'the Little Theatre with two other one-act plays, "The Purple Door knob" by Walter P. Eaton and "Letter" by Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements. These plays were produced through the combined ef forts of the following classes: Dra ol.ll.lcs I, Production; Dramatics 11,1 Stagecraft; and Dramatics 451,1 Directing. "The Old Lady Shows 'Her ,Med ells," directed by Janet Dayton, in eludes in its cast Sidney Fried- I man, a. charwoman, and Wesley 'Wagner, the Scottish soldier. Mur ieliSteinman, Gerry Lubow, and :Violet :Seigle are the other char women in the play and Raymond !Boyle. is a priest. "The First Dress Suit" was di- WRA Sponsor Skating Party • Roller skating will be in step this weekend when WRA sponsors a party of said variety in the Coll ;:cum Rink from 2 to 5 o'clock to morrow. The All-College Co-Rec affair is for civilians and service men, according to President Eliza beth McKinley. Mary. Ann Jennings, club activi ties chairman, and Julia Gilbert, !WRA vice-president, are super visors. Tickets which sell for 25 cents a person may be purchased from Miss Gilbert, Barbara Smith, Miss Jennings, Alice Hooper, Mary Grace Longenecker, Elizabeth Pike, and Miss McKinley, as well as Student Union. Servicemen may obtain tickets at the Service Cen ter. Tickets will not be sold .at the door . Saturday afternoon. Musical recordings will provide. the atmosphere, and cokes, re fresheners. The group will meet in front of White Hall at 1:45 o'clock. Women students are invited to Praynight in White Hall from 7 to o'clock Saturday. This week's committee includes Phyllis Crabtree, presidents' rep resentative; Elizabeth McKinley, board member; and Miss Helen Swenson, staff member. All sports facilities will be avail able and refreshments will be served. CLASSIFIED SECTION LOST—Argus 35mm camera in leather carrying case near Penn State Riding Club's training ring. Please return for substantial re ward to C. B. Zimmerman, 306 W. College avenue, or call 3183. lt-comp—PPM LOST—Brown and gold Shaeffer "Lifetime" pen. Namt on pen, Benjamin Cutts. Call Kay, third floor South Mac. LOST—One gold fraternity key with letters "0. D. :K." Reward. Contact W. R. Gordon, 240 Wood land Drive: 'Telephone 4486. It-pd—SC PW—Three passengers to (Phila delphia and return weekend of Sept. 11. Call 4281. It-pd—PPM 'WANTED— Experienced student to fire furnace in private home for room. Call 2137. 2t-pd—JH WANTED—Ride to or near Pitts burgh. Will share expenses. Call Bill, 37.4(. '1 t-pd—JH fRW--To 'Warren, Pa., or vicinity. 'Leave Saturday noon, Sept. 4. Cad Houston, 3251. It-pd —PPM LOST--Silver bracelet with hen t shaped Air Corps insignia. Call Kappa Alpha Theta 4371. rected by Betty Bowman. The play characters were Teddy Harding, portrayed by Robert Lewis; his sister, Claire Kohn; her boy friend, Melvin Cheekum; and Teddy's sympathetic mother, Florence Gil lespie. "Cottie Mourns," directed by Sally Myers, is the story of an Ozark girl, Shirley Merman; her husband, Harry Pebly; a boy friend . , Henry Simon; and girl friend. Jane Wyckoff. "The Purple Doorknob" was di rected by Josephine Nash and is enacted by Betty Read, Janet Ap pleby, and Miriam Zartman. They play Mrs. Barthlemow, Amanda Dunbar, and Viola Cole respec tively. "The Letter," directed by Anne Muir, includes in the cast Betty Moch as Helen Kane, Violet Nae gle as Parmela Whitney. and Lor raine Metzger as Dolly Darling. The stage crew was Grace 0. Clayton, Grace Goodlin, Lenys Blews, Betty Mock, Violet Naegle, and Lorraine Metzger. The light crew was composed •of Mary Jo 'McDougall, Anne Raffle, and James Casey. The property crew consisted of Lenys Blew and Grace Goodin. Josephine Nash, Betty Bowman, Sally Myers, and Janet Dayton comprised the make-up 'crew. Farm Labor Manpower bilization Nits 1591100 Nearly 16,000 workers have been placed on farms throughout Pennsylvania this summer to re lieve manpower shortages which began in Lancaster and Franklin according to a report from the College Agricultural Service. Twelve thousands seven hun dred had been stationed in farm labor camps and employed up to July 31: however. the number has increased by 3,000 since that cen sus was taken. A farm labor camp housing 70 women •and girls opened in Aug ust at Kepler Lodge near Pequea, Lancaster county. At about the same time, 102 boys, most of them from Philadelphia, arrived at Old Forge, near Waynesboro, Franklin county. The camps will be kept open until November 1. THE C.:OLLEGINA Army Air Corps Men Conduct Naming Contest For Paper, 'The Orphan' The Army Air Corps men re ceiving instruction at the College are singing the praises of their four-page tabloid, "The Orphan." Originally started a few months ago as a sideline, the task of put ting out the paper has developed into a full-time job. "The Orphan" now possesses a complete editorial staff and gives up-to-date coverage of Air Corps activities on the cam pus. Pictures, cartoons, features, col umns, editorials, and straight news • articles comprise the paper which is not an official War Department publication. A campaign is now being con ducted by the staff to find a per manent name for the paper. The present name. "The Orphan," was giVen to the publication because no other suitable name could be found. It was called "Penn Prop Patter" a number of weeks ago, was changed back to "The Orphan" for the time being. Each time a quintile of aviation students from the 330th Army Air• Corps CTD is sent to another school or training base, a new staff must be elected since most of the positions on the, paper are left open. The present editorial staff of "The Orphan" follows: Edward Bejan, editor-in-chief; Stanley Chazen, news editor; John Wil liamson, feature editor; Edwin Lewis, sports editor; Grant Steth man, photograph editor; Michael Cannata, circulation manage r; Stacy Mathas, cartoonist; and Ger son Zubkin, Ed Carlson, Robert Perry, Robert Breiling, Walter Jebe, Otto Peterson, and Wilfred Gallagher, reporters. Penn Stale Club Holds Armory Dance Friday 'The Penn State Club will hold a social dance in the Armory from 8 to 12 p.m. 'Friday, according to William R. 'Folk, chairman. The dance is free and open to every one. Nominations for executive 'pos. Mons - are now open and a meet ing will be held in the Penn State Club room in Old Main at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday for all men who are interested ; according to Ray A. Zaroda, president of the Club. Men. In Service (Continued frOnt page five) was later transferred to the Air Force. Taking his basic training at Santa Anna, Cal., he was grad uated from bombardier school at Phoenix, Ariz., in January, receiv ed his wings in May at Monroe, La., and was transferred to Camp Boise, Idaho, before going to Wendover Field. For extraordinary achievement with anti-submarine flights by the Northwest Africa Coastal Air Force, Tech. Sgt. Walter R. Lowry '4l has been awarded the Air Medal and Oak Leaf Cluster. At present he is stationed at Langley Field, Va., awaiting an assignment to another theatre of war. He en listed We day war was declared, was shipped to England last No vember, transferred to North Af rica at Tunis and Bizerte. He has about 40 operational missions to his credit. ' • Among the Navy V-7 students at Notre Dame who will receive commissions as ensigns this month are Jim Drylie, Jim Gotwals, Tom Mitchell, and Dick Stebbins. . . . Dave Gordon and Fowler Bounds are in the Army Air Corps at Santa Anna, Cal. . . . Dave See is in the Infantry at Ft. Bragg, N. C., study ing radio. . • . Paul Bost is at Camp Robinson, Ark., in the Me7.;- ical Corps. . . . Alex Taylor is with the Navy V-12 at Cornell. • In the ASTP at Stanford Uni versity; Cal., Cpl. Leonard ~Bach '43 is in the foreign area language course. A C and F student at the College and former business • man ager of the Collegian, he's .now studying Japanese and anthropol- I 9gy,.along with a few other things (62 hours in all). Busy Beaver Walt Gerson '43 has been a busy little beaver in his off hours down at Camp Wheeler, Ga. He thinks now he has collected the name, home address, class, company, and platoon of every man down there —total, 143. Too bad the column isn't .lonacr so we could include FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1943 them all. But we hope you're all having fun. They must have a lot of spare time down there if Walt has the time to do all that. A letter arrived the other day from Chuck Adams ex-'44, who is 'an MP at New Cumberland, Pa. He was surprised recently while making his rounds to hear a bunch of recruits giving out with a few Penn State songs. It was the boys who are back here now in ROTC. It was supposed to be quiet, but his old spirit intervened when he thought he - •ought to shut the boys up. So he left it to another who. wasn't quite so pakial to the Nit tany Lions. Also, he likes getting the Collegian (plug) and hopes to get back to finish college some day. He says, "I don't have any ambi tion to be a cop all my life." . Daniel Peters has been pro . - moted to first lieutenant at the Fourth Ferrying Group, Municipal. Airport, Memphis, Tenn. He was a flight instructor before going into • the service. There's a nice letter with a lot of that old spirit in it from a couple of the boys klown at Ft. Bragg, N. c. Sorry we don't have room to print it, but it was appre ciated. anyway. The boys are Pvt. Jack Penrod, A/C. James Frame Jr., Pvt. Hugh Ridell Jr., and Pvt. Mort6n Peck. There are about 300 State men down there. Maybe some slack week we'll have room, for the letter. Keller Releases If Ball Costs (Continued rrom Pfige One) of financial success may cribed to the inability of obtaining a band for a Saturday night en gagement and the resulting dearth of servicemen' at., the ball. How ever, many servicemen were pres ent when Maestro Will Osborne played for one solid hour before the ball, Keller added.