P &GE TWO • . • A . • ;; . akiIAIIGA.R.ET KEEFE, who is the alternate player of Evelyn, Betty Shenk, and Jack Reed siwwn in tense scene. it'lrß 7 , 7 r MP 1 .'.Ar :,4%, , „ 4 1 ,e m m r •t' lt + l ''' , : '` , : ii: • & i t , : f %.44; :. 0 . ' ' ii ...n..,,..,,..,. % : f` V :i,. t te w 5113 ;^ , 4 af,,31 • tie* DEWY SHENK AVID JACK REED, who have leading roles. —Photograph by IVlervin Will 'MHO' Decorates Armory At ASTIP Informal Dance MHO—the little man who isn't there—will provide the chief decoration for, the ASTP informal closed dance in the .AxPiory from 8 o'clock to 12 midnight tomorrow. With his eyes peering over the window sill and a pair of hands the only visible appendages, MHO and lots of his brothers will watch over the activities of the first ASTP - dance of the season. ' Dick Berge and his orches tra, which has recently been enlarged, will Turnish the music for the affair. The following guests have been invited by the dance committee: President and Mrs. Hetzel,, Mr. and Mrs. Morse, Mr. and Mrs. Hostetter, Dean and Mrs. Wag ner, Dean and Mrs. Schott, Dean and Mrs. Warnock, Dean Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman, Dean and Mrs. Fletcher, Dean and Mrs. !Whitmore.- Dean and Mrs. Trabue, 'Dean and Mrs. Hammond, Dean and Wackniverirs Displayed A collection of war souvenirs, contributed by graduates of the department of agricultural biolog ical chemistry now in military ..service, is on display in the lobby of Prear Laboratory. Me • exhibit includes photo graphs taken in Paris, Philippine native .knives; Japanese cigarettes, army field rations,. and Japanese, Philippine, and Okinawa invasion , • r S t . I r • est fl s, 1 Mrs. Steidle, Dean and Mrs. Kern, Prcl!essor a 7.4. Mrs. Pistil:turn, Professor and Mrs. Gullo, Com mander and Mrs. Wisner, Lieu tenant and Mrs. Jones; Lieuten ant and Mrs. Grieb, Leiutenant ant' and Mrs. Grieb, Lieutenant and: Mrs. • O'Connell, Lieutenant Mrs. Ganong. Wife . Model .. Guest presenting three women in GUEST August 3 & 4 —Photograph by Mervin Wilf IN THE HOUSE A PLAYER'S SHOW ADMISSION zsoc plus:;'4w 'I'HE COLLEGIAN "Guest In The House," first Players' presentation of the semester, will be given in Schwab Auditoridm, 8:30 o'- clock, tonight and tomorrow night. . A y. r axl fry 'I A modern drama, "Guest In The House" is the - story of Ann and Stephen Proctor, played by Betty Shenk and Jack Reed, anti the trouble that comes into their home' With the entrance of Evelyn, Ann's young cousin. Marjorie Stout will play the part of the menace in tonight's performance, and Margaret Keefe will give her interpretation of the part tomorrow night. Both prom ise to grip the audience with their part of the cardiac invalid who takes advantage of the Proctors' hospitality by making the ser vants quit. fraying Ann's nerves to the breaking point by playing Litsz's "Liebe,straum" over and , over again on her victrola, and I coming closeNto breaking up Annl and' Stephen's happy marriage. The part of Lbe,. the Proctors' young daughter, win be played by Cheryl Davis, town • youngster. Verna Sevast will be seen as Aunt Martha Proctor, and Syd ney Friedman as Miriam Blake, a model. Remaining parts ale cast as fol lows: Hilda, a maid, Mary Ann Kem per; Dr. Shaw, a minister, George Miller; Dan Proctor, Stephen's brother, James McDouglall; John, the servant, Portman Paget; Mr. Dow, Sidney Ebock; Mrs. Dow, Violet Grubin; Pamala Rhodes, a reporter. Dorothy Newborn; and Tracy, a photographer, Robert Stabley. Henning Helms is director of the drama. Dorothy B. Scott de signed. the set and supervised cos tumes, and Margaret L. Witt acted as technical supervisor. Assistants to the director for the production are Carol.Broberg, Claire Kohn, and Eleanor Phillips. Technical crews are: Stage: Dee James, manager; Arlene Artenberg, John Duink, Robert Gruver, Kathleen Law rence, Lois Lewis, Rose Sherman, Dorothy South. Construction: Robert Gruver, Bruce Mohn. Properties: Gertrude Spector, manager; Jeanne Barinott; Arlene Artenberg, Rebecca Burk, Cecile Goodman Ruth Hawkins, Marian Johnson, Arlene Miller. Costumes: Esther Greenes, manager; Nancy George Benshoff, assistant; Jean Bailey, Phyllis Berney, Sydelle Btickwalter, Edith Edlis, Thebe Mauer, Lois McClel land, Helen Beth Orange. Paint: Robert Gruver, manager; Lorraine Meltzer, assistant; Lois Lewis, Gloria Rosenberg, Rose Sherman, Dorothy . South, June Walter, Shirley Wenger, Joseph Vispi. Advertising: Eleanor Zins, manager; Jeanne Huber Butler, assistant; Joan Berchtold, Phyllis Berney. Kathryn Fix, Maryanne Fritz Maurice Hymowitz, Phyllis Mattran, Gloria Nerenberg, Helen Beth Orange, 'Mary Elizabeth Smith, 'Nancy •Sobelman, Marjorie Stridinger, JOseph Vispi. • Make-up: Audre, y Kreeger, manager; 'Betsy Adams, Elizabeth 'Davis, Laurette Schwartz, Mari lyn Tanner. Electrical: Libby Peters, man ager; Edgar Eddins. assistant;" Ro bert Drllcker,'Edythe.Morris, Ri chard Rittenhouse, Harvey SilVer- Schwab Auditorium IVIAWORIE STOUT, who the part of Evelyn. Woman Linotypist Aids in Printing The Collegian The Collegian has really gone feminine. Not only are most mem -bers of the editorial staff women but also one of the linotype opera tdrs at the Nittany Printing Com pany, where the Collegian is pub lished, is Mrs. Leroy Reed. "I like linotype operating much better than housework,' declared Mrs. Reed, who was interviewed at the machine with which she turns out more than a regular newspaper column per hour. Mr. Reed, who works with her in - art print shop, frankly stated, "She's a ;better hewspaper operator than I am, in spite of the fact that she was never inside a newspaper office before we were married." [Mrs. Reed, who is working for the Centre Daily Times during the three-week ,alosence of another operator, boasts that her husband taught her all she knows. Mr. Reed, on the contrary, said, "Teaching your wife to-run a lino type machine is like teaching her to drive a car. The other operators were more useful in instructing her than I was." stone, D. J. Smart, Philip Spahr. William . Folwell is the chief carpenter, 'with Calvin Maynard his assistlant. Joseph Vispi is house manager. 44 H 1 . t,' . ' :';'.. -(: . ~/ r / '' • '-,,., 1 , , Ew.rd J. Nichols Penn State faculty 'Membelt W. KEELER :',C...O.LLE.GESTORE•A FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1945 i. 1~ ~. use plays BETTY SHENK plays Ann Prof , tor. Helm Announces An Exhibitions With the return of studio in struction in water color to the sum mer -session curriculum after a lapse of three years, there will be two divisions of fine arts student exhibitions, both of which will open 'Tuesday at 8:30 a.m., an nounced Prof. J. Burn 1-felme of. the art department. •An exhibition of work done by the students of Prof. Andrew W. Case in introductory and inter mediate water color painting dur ing the summer session will be shown in the - College Art Gallery, 303 Main Engineering. The annual exhibition of Work done by the students of Hobson Pittman in the classes in oil paint, ing will take place in the 'Mineral Industries Art Gallery. The displays will include a !care ful selection of the most outstand ing works produced by students during the past six weeks of the summer session. Both galleries will be open Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs day from loci a.m. to 10 p.m. Hobson Pittman will .talk on the oil painting exhibition at the LlVlin eral Industries gallery Wednesday at 8 p.ni. Mr. Pittman, a noted art ist, is director and instructor in art. at the Friends Central Day School,. Overbrook. The New Novel by
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