TUESDAY,' OCTOBER 7, 1952. Council 4 Defers Rec Pall Vote The council of Leonides, independent women's organization, last night postponed decision on the proposal to set aside 300 seats in Recreation Hall for faculty, townspeople, and graduate students until each dormitory unit representative could discuss the idea with her group. - The council• voted to have each dormitory unit representative help solicit funds for the Lion suit` worn by Alex Gregal at the home football games. Hilda Hoge land ' and Gertrude Kreider will collect the funds on Friday to be turned in. to the' Daily Collegian office. Panhel , To Discuss Floral Gift A plan for the systematic pre sentation of flowers by sororities for Chapel services wilt' be dis cussed at the Panhellenic Council meeting at 7 tonight' in the Alpha Epsilon Phi suite in Simmons Hall. Marlene Heyman, president of the sorority governing body, said that two members will be ap pointed to the All-College Cabinet leadership project committee set up to acquaint interested students in the workings of campus govern nient. The possibility of having speak ers address sorority groups after their weekly meetings is being sponsored by the Penn State Christian Association. A list of persons willing to speak to the ' groups would be made and each sorority would then invite those who inter es t their particular group. There will also be a discussion of the competitive motorcade sug gested as an activity for the Homecoming game during Penn sylvania Wee k. Interfraternity Council and Panhel will wo& to gether with one sorority and one fraternity entering a car. Final plans and arrangements have not been completed as yet. Dungaree Drag Ticket Sale Begins at SU Tickets for the Dungaree Drag, informal girl-ask:boy dance spon sored by Cwens, sophomore wom en's hat society, will go on sale today at the. Student Union desk in .Old „Main, Baylee Freidman, chairman, said yesterday. They are $1.50 per couple. The Drag will be held from 9 p.m: to midnight Saturday in Rec reation Hall. One of the features at the. dance will be the wearing of home-made corsages by the men. They will be made by their dates and prizes will, be awarded to the men who display the most unusual corsages. Last year's inventions ranged any where between plain leaves and elaborate fruit displays. Proceeds from the Drag will go toward scholarships for worthy sophomore women. Last year four $5O scholarships were awarded from the profits. This is the seventh annual Drag with the Sadie Hawkins spirit prevailing. This year, Miss Freid man said, should have even great er spirit since it is : leap year. Tickets are also available from active members of Cwens. Jack Huber and his orchestra will play. Cider and pretzels will be served. she TAVERN Menu for Tuesday, Oct; 7 ITALIAN SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE MIXED SEAFOOD , PLATTER - BEEF PIE • - CALF'S LIVER PRIME SIRLOIN STEAK By LIX. NEWELL Appointments to the All-Col lege Cabinet leadership project committee were Elizabeth John son, Margaret Kahn,, and Lila Spinner. The committee was set up to train students in parliamen tary procedure and other work ings of student government. WRA Representative Committee heads were appoint ed for the Regional Independent Student Convention to be held here Nov. 6,7, and 8. They are Miss Hogeland, registration; Miss Hogeland and Gertrude Kreider, housing; Helen ' Norris, banquet; Lavanche Leith, decoration; Phyl lis Griffith, food; Sara Leslie, recreation; and Guyla Woodward, secretarial staff. The representative to the Worn en's Recreation Association and her alternate are Ethel Wilson and Margaret .Lamaster. They will help coordinate women's intra mural sports. Sergeant-at-arms Named Since the proposal that Leo nides affiliate with the National Independent Student Association must be approved by the Dean of Women's office, it was tabled until the next meeting. The constitu tion of Leonides also must be approved by the national organ ization before it can be accepted. Miss Leith was appointed ser geant-at-arms by Vivian Peter son, president. Miss Johnson and Miss Leith are co-chairmen of the combined committees of decoration and re freshments fOr the Autumn Ball. The ball is being co-sponsored by Leonides and the Association of Independent Men and will be held Oct. 18 . with Jack Huber's orchestra. Entertainment by mem bers of both groups is being plan ned for the intermission. Discuss Turn-About A suggestion that L e o n id e s meetings be rotated among the women's dormitories will be in vestigated by Nancy Lockwood and Dina Topper. Possibilities for having a turn about day will be reported upon at the next meeting by Miss Krei der, Evelyn Wolfson, Miss- Grif fith, and Katherine Kingsley. Miss Peterson said that the next meeting will be held at 6:45 p.m. Monday in the second floor lounge . of McElwain Hall. Zeta Tau Alpha • The sisters of Zeta Tau Alpha serenaded their new ribbonees Monday night. Thursday night the sisters and their ribbonees had a spaghetti dinner at the Tavern. You can cut • :r. :,- -,-„- : -,, ~,..,,.,'...' i t . , Bread and Classes, too ... But . HAIR is "Our" Job! , . Any cut you desire, we'll do. Come in today! ALICE and DON HAIRDRESSERS 107 S. Allen Street THE, DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA TO* take some of the guess work out of moviegoing, the Daily Collegian will print twice a week, information concerning* films currently playing in State College theaters. This - service is in no way intended, as an evalu atioii of any film's worth. Man-eating pirana fish, head hunter tribes, and a white goddess will be seen in "Strange World, " an - adventure yarn playing today and tomorrow at the Cathaum. The story concerns a young man• who returns to the Matto Grosso jungles of South America to search . for his father, who dis- - appeared With a lost scientific ex pedition in search of a golden In ca goddess some years before. He finally discovers the scientist's daughter living with a friendly Indian -tribe and through her learns the fate of the rest of the expedition. Reportedly shot in the unchart ed interior of the Amazon jungle, the film recalls the disappearance or explorer Lt. Col. Percy Fawcett, who led an expedition 'into the same territory in 1925. Angelica Hauff, a Viennese bal lerina and actress, plays opposite Alexander Carlos, performer on the Brazilian stage. The feature begins at 1:46, 3:46, 5.46, 7:46, andl 9:46 p.m. "The Duel at Silver Creek," a western which pits law and, order against a band of frontier claim jumpers, will be at the Cathaum Thursday for one day only. Star ring .Audid Murphy, Ho war d Hughes-protege Faith Domergue, and Stephen McNally, the film boast's Murphy's f i r s t fade-out clinch. Formerly, it seems, he has beef riding off -into a Technicolor sunset leaving behind him a sad heroine . . . either because he's in the custody of a frontier posse or he doesn't think he's right for the girl. As the Silver Kid i.vho's as fast with the cards as with the six Norma Cooper and John Hughes were' chosen "Mr. and Mrs. Most" at - a mixer for ,independent men and women sponsored by Philotes and the Penn State Club Satur day night in Simmons Hall play room. Miss Cooper was 'given a scarf, and 'Hughes received a handker chief. Wrist, ankle and head measure ments,- room number and age of contetants were totaled to de Films to Feature Satire, Drama, Adventure on Four Continents Penn State Club, Philotes Choose Mr., Mrs. Most shooter, .Murphy, comes through and helps a crusading law officer (McNally). Miss Domergue, who plays '` a member of the outlaw fang in her third film, was groom ed for ten years while under con tract to Hughes before her first picture was released. She has ap peared in "Where Danger Lives" and "Vendetta." Susan Cabot heads the support ing cast as Dusty, "who ,could handle a shotgun, better than most women could a skillet." The film is in technicolor. , The feature plays at 1:55, 3:53, 5:51, 7:49, and 9:47 p.m. Alec Guinness, England's top comedian, makes a shambles of the textile industry in the J. Ar thur Rank comedy, "The Man in the _White Suit," playing today, tomorrow, and Thursday at the State. The satire, of • the sort the British do so well, ribs-the follies of both labor and capital. As a laborer in a textile mill, Guinness steals time off to con duct research experiments in the plant's laboratory and comes up with a new kind of cloth which will never wear out and which is impervious to soil. His joy is short-lived, however, when labor ers and other textile manufactur ers band togkher to prevent pro duction of the cloth, which they see as a threat to the entire tex tile industry. The unusual sound track for the 'film was worked out by blowing through a glass, tube into a. pan of glycerine and by forcing water intermittently through a small opening with a microphone am plifying the sound. Feature time is 2:05, 3:58, 5:51, 7:44, and 9:37 p.m. Adapted from Alan Paton's best selling novel about the.. color line in South Africa, "Cry the Be loved Country" will end a two day run at the Nittany tonight. Canada - Lee, Charles Carson, Sid- Alpha Lambda Delta Will Meet Tonight Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman women's honorary, will meet at 6:30 tonight in the basement of Grange Dormitory. • • Plans will be made for the an nual tea given by Alpha Lambda Delta for freshman women who were valedictorians of their high school graduating classes, Nancy Ward, president, said yesterday. Also to be discussed at the meet ing will be the honorary's tutoring service, she said. termine the winners. High e st totals won. Music for dancing was provided by records, and doughnuts, cider, apples, and pretzels were served. ney Poitier, and Joyce Carey are seen in the atmosphere of un believable -poverty, moral disinte gration, and second class citizen ship that is the lot of the dark skinned persons in South Africa. The realistic, and not-pretty drama may be seen at 6:15, 8:01, and 9:40 p.m. "Diplomatic Courier," a spy thriller, plays Wednesday at the Nittany with Tyrone Power, as a State department "messenger boy," in the title role. Patricia Neal, as a world-weary Indian girl, and Stephen McNally, as a colonel in the U.S. Military Po lice, are. also caught up in this Iron Curtain saga. The plot, which concerns an illusive set of micro films containing the Soviet time table for the invasion of Yugo slavia, will unfold' at 6:15, 8:02, and 9:41 p.m. Esther Williams, Joan Evans, and Vivian Blaine don WAVE uniforms for MGM's musical com edy "Skirts Ahoy," playin g Thurs day and Friday at the \littany. Billy Eckstine, Debbie Reynolds, and the DeMarco sisters give out with Harry Warren's songs in a portrait of life at the WAVE bar racks at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. Complete with Esther's famed aquatic perform ances, the picture starts at 6:15; 8:06, and 9:50 p.m. MISS BARBARA STOCK OL T )„,? Attention AIE Social elzairmen! More than likely, yOu are the one responsible for the selection of a photog rapher for social affairs of your house. If you ap preciate the quality of LION- STUDIO portraits, then you'll be pleased with our party coverage which will include group and individual pictures. Call the LroN STUDIO for prompt, courteous, and professional 'service —You will personally receive a portrait of you and your date with our compliments. Call Today ...7Z.e Jon Stall() Phone 4454 PAGE FIVE