FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, ISH* Seaman Finds Acting Mild After Overseas Service As State Trooper Brendell in. players’ forthcoming production, “Papa Is All,” Seaman Mat Szeyl ler of Barracks 41 finds that act ing in a play is easy, mild business compared to his performance in the drama of war for four years. • Enlisting in the Navy in August 1940, Szeyller was assigned to the aircraft carrier- Yorktown which was operating in the Pacific Ocean. After nine months the warship transferred to the Atlan tic by way of the Panama Canal. Seaman Szeyller was then placed aboard the aircraft carrier Ran ger as radioman and remained on the ship for two-and-a-half years. During the North African in vasion the Ranger was operating just off Casablanca. When the signal was given planes based on the Ranger took off and protected the ground forces swarming ashore. During three days of op position, the waters were infested with enemy submarines which at tempted to torpedo .the carrier. The Ranger’s planes and destroy er escorts sunk the enemy subs. Szeyller was situated in the Orkney and Shetland Islands just north of Scotland during the lat ter part of 1943. The Ranger was ordered to destroy enemy ship ping in company with the British home fleet off the coast of Nor Players To Hunt Authentic Props Promising to scour the country side like a swarm of hungry locusts in search of genuine Pennsylvania Dutch furniture and kitchenware for the forthcoming presentation of “Papa Is AH,” Players technical crews prepare to lend an authentic air to the sets, Pat-McClure, assis tant to the director, announced to day. ■Cupboards and chests, such as would be found in a Mennonite kitchen, are being reproduced by the assistants to the designer in painting the sets, she said. The crew heads as released by Prof. Frank Neusbaum, director of the play, include 'Libby 'Peters as prompter, Bill Morton as stage manager, and Bob Whitall as con struction engineer. Property man agers‘are Allene Babbitt and Nan Hoeflich. Helen Blanker has been named costume manager, Norma Lee Hoo ver, paint manager, and Mary Anne Mason, light manager. Ad vertising manager is Louise Zim mers. Assistants to the designer are Audrey Kreeger, Nan Charles, and Jean Bre'skin. Anrie Hazard ■ is the assistant to the technician. Nightly rehearsals continue to prepare the play for its presenta tion in Schwab Auditorium Sept. 29 and 30. There is a smart student named Joe And his flower orders all go To WOODRING'S for they Have a special way Of filling each order, you know! way. When the Norwegian garri son stationed at Spitzbergen ra dioed that they were being at-, lacked by the German battleship Scharnhorst, the Ranger and her British escort attempted to inter cept and annihilate her. The Ranger landed in Scotland for minor repairs in the latter part of October 1943, which meant a brief leave for Szeyller. He rail roaded to London where he met his sister Margaret, first lieuten ant in the Army Nursing Corps. For five days the couple toured England and Scotland, including the bombed areas of London. Rituals more elaborate—and painful—than any' campus' fra ternity could devise were ex perienced by Szeyller when he crossed the Equator. A sailor who had crossed the imaginary ring around the world the longest time ago was crowned King Neptune, and supervised the ceremonies. Shellbacks, gobs who had sailed across the Equator before, mas queraded and escorted the Polly wogs or greenies to the Regent Of Waters. Before the grueling proceedings were oyer, Seaman Szeyller had delivered a speech, had' his hair clipped, and face painted, and had been sufficiently dunked. Because Szeyller survived the ordeal he was awarded a Shellback certifi cate, handed out to all sailors who cross the Equator. During May and June of this year, the seaman attended pre-V -12 school at A'sbury Park, ;N. J. In July Szeyller reported to Penn State for 16 months of training. CLASSIFIED SECTION Will the man who was looking for the girl Dan pleace contact room 130 or 137 Atherton. ' Lost: A gold activities key with safety catch. Contains initials E. R. P. on back. Mount Carmel-High School inscribed on front. Senti mental value. Phone Bebs Parke, Womans Bldg. 2nd East. •Spaghetti dinners served every Wednesday and Saturday 6 p. m. Make reservations. Parties by ap pointment. Alpha Phi Delta; Phone 3412. For rent. Four room ahd bath furnished apartment. Suitable for four students. Rental $40.00. A vailable at'once call 2904. Help wanted. Male student. A vailable from 8-11 p. m. Apply Nittany Lion Inn. Lost: Shell rimmed glasses in brown 'leather case. Call 232 Grange. Reward. Room and board. Only board'if preferred. Call 3332 or come to 243 South Pugh. THE COLLEGIAN Rabbi Eppstein To Direct Hillel RABBI VICTOR EPPSTEIN Beginning next week, Rabbi Victor Eppstein will take Rabbi Benjamin Kahn’s place at the Hil lel Foundation when the latter leaves for McGill University, Can ada. The. new Rabbi, who arrived Tuesday, graduated in 1926 from the University of California and did- graduate work at Columbia University. He was ordained in 1929, after attending the Jewish IhstitUte Of Religion. Havana, Cuba, Scranton, and New York have been some of the cities whose congregations the Rabbi has served. In 1940 he ran for Congress on the Democratic ticket in Montgomery county, Pennsylvania.' .. . Rabbi Eppstein operated a mod ern dairy farm- in Montgomery county near Pottstown. He doesn’t think farming is too far a cry from politics—“ George Washington had a farm.” . In 1941, after Pearl Harbor was bombed, Rabbi Eppstein enlisted m the Maripe Corps as a private. Now honorably discharged, the Rabbi is acting as counsellor of the Hillel organization at Bucknell University as Well'as being direc tor of the State College unit. Rabbi Kahn will introduce his successor to the congregation to night at 7:30 p.m. during the Hillel services. Departure Of Lt. Rua Marks Official Close Of Air Corps At College Lt. Frank D. Rua, acting com mander of the 330th Army Air Corps Division leaves today for Freeman -Army Air Field, Sey mour, Ind. He was transferred to the College April 21, 1943 from Pittsburgh, where he served with a College Training Detachment Unit. Lt. Rua, resident of Los An geles, served here first as Plans and' Training Officer, then as Special Service Officer. Since the departure of Maj. Thomas E. Leet, six weeks ago, Rua has been the acting commander at the College, in charge of winding up the gov ernment’s Air Corps affairs re garding property and supplies. He is the last member of the Air Corps to leave the College. After being graduated as a sec ond lieutenant of the Infantry at Fort Benning, Ga., July 1943, Rua was assigned as an admini stration officer to the Air Corps at Fort McClellan. He has also served at Maxwell Field, Gunter Field, and Stuttgart Army Air Base, Pittsburgh. In February 1943 Rua was promoted to first lieutenant. Previous to his induc tion he was a chemistry major at Captain Describes Death, Defeat At Kasserine Pass By ESTELLE SIMON Today United Nation troops are blasting the very foundations of Hitler’s Fortress Europe. Two years ago the war situation did not look auspicious where the Al lies were concerned. Among the factors which made for pessimism was the decisive defeat of Amer ican troops at the Battle of Kas serine Pass in Tunisia. Capt. Benedict C. Hausdorf, stationed at the College with the ASTP units, took part in that bat tle. Attached to the First Infan try Division he fought through out the entire Tunisian campaign and then went on to Sicily to help give the “soft'underbelly of Eu rope” its first gas pain. Military experts m the United States attributed the loss of the battle to green inexperienced troops? According to Captain Hausdcrf the Americans lost be cause there weren’t. enough of .them. Against one infantry battalion, some combat engineers, and a few other odds and ends from differ ent divisions, the Germans at tacked with parts of two Panzer divisions from the famed Afrika Corps. While he and his men were holding the pass so that tanks and other mechanized armor might effect a strategic retreat, Captain Hausdorf recalls an inci dent which seemed grim at the time. “As the last tank rumbled by, the driver stuck his head out and and yelled, ‘The next tank you see will be German’.” Death or capture appeared in evitable for the men holding the pass. At the strategic moment a British atmored brigade rushed there and counter-attacked. It was the Americans first contact with the British who as Captain Haus dorf puts it, “saved our necks.” Catain Hausdorf recollects the plight of one outfit which had been badly chopped up. in battle. Five tanks, detailed to save them if possible, crashed through to their position.. Everyone climbed aboard the tanks. All of the wounded and some of the dead were evacuated. After the dismal failure at Kasserine Pass the Americans were organized as one Corps and PAGE THREE ' went from the defensive to the offensive. Fighting for the first time as a team they participated in the Battle of El Guettar. This was the battle in which a com bat team succeeded in stopping the 10th Panzer Division. El Guet tar was also the point where the British Eighth Army succeeded in making a junction with the Americans. Meanwhile Captain Hausdorf. had become company commander of a rifle company. Shortly after Easter he met what he describes as the worst situation in all of his overseas service. “My company was designated to make an attack on a small hill. We got to the hill and found we had bitten off more than we could chew since the Germans were firmly established there. We did manage to get a foothold on the hill. “The Germans made six coun ter-attacks the first day. We lost five of our six officers. I. got by without a scratch although they put a bullet hole through my jacket sleeve. “It did not seem as though wo would get out of there alive, but the colonel was able to send the remnants of the battalion up. We stayed there for five days under coristant shelling and mortar bar rages. “By the end of the fifth day the stench from dead bodies made remaining there almost imposs ible. We decided to move up. The Germans had evacuated ahead of us but we captured many prison ers.” Some of the prisoners wore a special ribbon to show- that they had taken part in the siege of Stalingrad. Captain Hausdorf. saya wryly that he suspects they were given the ribbons because they succeeded in surviving. TO BE CONCLUDED NEXT WEEK Carrier Corp. Interviews Carrier Corporation representa tive W. G. Hillen will be on cam pus Thursday to interview seventh and eighth semester engineering students. Arrangements for inter views should be made in the Col lege Placement Service office, 204 Old Main, as soon as possible.