FRIDAY, JNU vjEMBJEn n, xauff Doing Their Duty... MARY FOUCART and Edwin Barniiz (rear), election officials, explain voting procedure to Elizabeth Green and Robert Rapp, sophomores, in yesterday's elections in the lobby of Old Main. Wahl, Stark Named Stars Of Players 7 'Antigone 7 Anne Wahl and Newell Stark have been named to star in Players’ production of “Antigone,” Warren S Smith, the play director, announced yesterday. Miss Wahl appears in the title role. Mr. Stark will play Creon, king of Thebes. Supporting players for “Antigone” are Donald Colbert as Hai mon, Peter Farrell as the Chora gus, Robert Flick as the Messen ger, Robert Klein as Teireicis, Helen Jaskoi as Bury dice, Moy lan Mills as the Sentry, and Joada Oswalt as Ismene. Appear In Chorus The chorus includes Richard Anderson, Herbert Arnold, Thom as Farrell, Jack Garretson-Butt, Edward Girod, Thomas Kearns, Lowell Keller, Thomas Lucas, John Pakkanen, William Sulli van, Walter Vail, and Max Wil liams. Two chorus parts are still unfilled. “Antigone” will run the nights of Jan. 11, 12, and 13, at Schwab auditorium. Although the two chorus parts are open, the play has gone into nightly rehearsal. Interview Applicants Smith said that he and Robert D. Reifsneider, the play’s chore ographer, will interview appli cants for the two remaining parts in the dramatics office in Schwab auditorium. The parts call for men between 5 feet 6 inches and 6 feet in height. Interviews will be by appointment. . The script being used for the Players production is a transla tion from the original Greek of Sophocles. A translation from a modern French revival has been played frequently in the last few years, PSCA Frosh Council Plans Hike Up Nittany The Freshman council of the Penn State Christian association is planning a hike to Mount Nit tany Sunday at 1:30 p.m. The hike is open to anyone on campus and the council suggests that all hik ers bring along small snacks. Monday night the council will meet in 304 Old Main at 7 o’clock. Dr. Bertram Kessel will talk on recreation as a career. PERSONS FROM WARREN, PA. and Vicinity interested in bus transporta tion home for Thanksgiving please call 7059 Friday even ing. Cost will be prorated. First Come First Served THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Collegian Pholo by Slone Hillel Holds First Meeting Sunday The Hillel town meeting will hold its first session of the year Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Hillel auditorium. Rev. Frank Montgomery, pas tor of the Methodist church, Dr. Richard Raymond, associate pro fessor of Physics at the College, and Dr. Laurence Rosan, instruc tor of Philosophy •at the College will speak. The subject of the meeting will be “Are Science, Re ligion and the Humanities in con flict?” Each of the speakers will pre sent a different view. Following their addresses there will be from the audience. The program open discussion and questions is open to the public. The First National Bank Of State College / Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Federal Reserve System Jay Lucas Four As Drum Major High-stepping Jay Lucas, Blue band drum major, will end four years of Beaver field strutting tomorrow at the Rutgers football game. The six-foot four and a half inch drum major has led the band for the last three years and during the 1941 foot ball season without missing a single game. A three year stretch in the Army interrupted his twirling career. Getting Used To It He smiled at the query of ner vousness during the half time rou tines and replied, “I’m getting over it in my old age.” The 27- year-old blond began twirling in 1938 while attending the. Wil liam Penn high school in Harris burg. Twice during practice, about a year after he started twirling, he miscalculated a catch and knocked himself out. It was the only time it ever happened, he added, but for a while he was afraid that parental pressure would mark the end of a short career. He never did stop twirl ing, however. His most difficult routine, he said, is a finger tip balance in which he passes the baton around 'iis body while balancing it on •is finger tips and twisting his wrists. A toss may look harder, but in this one enough inertia must be obtained at the beginning of the routine to keep it spin —Collegian Photo by MohaH Jay Lucas Year Career Ends This Year ning a full turn around his body. Uses Heavy Baton Jay wears out a pair of 11 ounce batons about every year and a half. He prefers the heavy baton over the more commonly-used light ones because of its better balance and trueness. His uniform was ordered from Pittsburgh on a Tuesday several years ago and he remembered how it was de livered a few moments before game time the same week. “They really rushed it,” he grinned. Cold? days are his nemesis as far as twirling is concerned, he said. Not enough perspiration on his hands makes the baton harder to catch and easier to slip off his palms. On such days his palms seem like “highly polished glass.” Questioned as to how it felt to drop a baton during a perform ance he again smiled and said he was getting used to it in his “old age.” • Last June, the senior in archi tecture married a girl from his Open Until Midnight Doily BIXBy DOES BETTER WITH FIGURES )_ SINCE HE STARTED USING VITALIS/ You'll cut quit* a figure, too—if you use your bead—and “Live-Action” Vitalis care. Give that mop on top the famous "60-second workout” 50 seconds scalp massage (feel the differ ence!) ... 10 seconds to comb (and will the wimmin see the dif ference!). You’ll look neat ’n natural. Bye-bye loose, flaky dandruff and dryness, too. So latch on to Vitalis—see the man at the drug store or barber shop pronto. / 1 "60-Second Workout" home town, Harrisburg. The hap py couple have an apartment on Prospect ave., which is furnished with modern furniture, carrying out his interest in modem de sign. Jay is a member of Scarab, Phi Gamma Alpha, and the campus junior chapter of the American Institute of Architecture. Last year he was a delegate to the national convention of the AIA in Washington. He is very enthus iastic about architecture, or as he quoted it, “frozen music,” and he would like to take up graduate work after graduation next June. His final football game appear ance with the Blue band will be at the Pitt game during Thanks giving vacation. After that he’ll hang up his batons, plumed hat, and white shoes and retire from the spinning world of batons. IE Honorary Founded Alpha Pi Mu, national indus trial engineering honorary socie ty, has established a chapter at the College. The chapter is under the direc tion of R. M. Eastman, professor in the school of engineering. In dustrial engineers who excel in scholarship may be recognized by this new fraternity. VIC'S HAKES ANDWICHES UNDAES MACKS 145 S. Allen St. PAGE thREE
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