WEDNESDAY..DECEMBER 1, 1954 So ••hornore Star Ne.; . •:Hqs ...lEad . - Role In .91:0,kei7s - ::::: Show: .- - -:. • Newcomers to campus dramatic circles* can take hope from Elizabeth Ives, third semester -arts and letters major, that they -, may not be buried forever in the chorus or in walk-on' roles. Miss Ives has the leading role in Players' presentation of Emlyn Williams' `.`The Corn Is Green." 25. Are Given ROTC Awards Twenty-five seniors enrolled in the advance Army Reserve Offi cers' Training Corps at the: Uni versity have been designated'Dis c tinguished Military Students. The honor is bestowed on-stii dents demonstrating leadershipin the classroom and "in - the , field. High scholastic standards., in rriiti tary as well as other subjects also are required for the honor. 'Seniors who hold the rating of Distinguishee. Military Students at the time of their graduation may qualify for tibinination for Regular. Army commissions. Students honfired are: - - Howard Guenther and Donald Clark, in dustrial education majors ; James Simpson•,' Richard Feicht, and Bruce Lutton, electri cal engineering majors; John. Hawk, ,La verne Frederick, William Wismer, James' Ferrier,. and James J. .Anderson, forestry majors; Robert Moyer, education major; Fred Wilder, mechanical engineering ma jor; Jerry Donovan, labor management relations major. Curtis Hare, chemistry major ; Belford Thompson and George' gnyder,poultry bus-, bandry majors ; John Collett,' John Car penter, and Michael Durkin, arts and let. ters majors ; Robert Rohland, recreation education major ; Jacob Maizel, .agricul tural and biological chemistry major ;.•Gark Gehrig, architectual ,engin;eering Major ; John Gable, civil engineering major ;...Tohn Chillrud, science.major ; and . Walter Wur ster, dairy science major: NV`hois in News To Honor 470 Approximately 470 students have been selected for "Who's in the News at Penn State," the Uni versitY's "Who's Who" which honbrs outstanding student lead ers. • The •publication, sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi, men's profes sional journalism fraternity; and Theta Sigma Phi, women's pro fessional journalism fraternity, will- be distributed to University ,offices, fraternities, sororities, and independent .g ro u D - s . • Students named in the publication are en titled to two copies of the book. -The. selections committee was composed of the All-University president, the Women's Student Government Association presi dent, the nine presidents of col lege councils, the editor of the Daily CollegiAn, and the editor and - associate editor of "Who's in the News at Penn State." ACE! to Hold Holiday Discussion The "'Association for Childhood Education International will meet at 7 tonight in Atherton Lounge. The topic of discussion will be the 'Holiday customs ,of Protes tants, Catholics and Jews. The talk will be led by representatives of the three denominations. The traditional Mitten Tree will be decorated with mittens from anyone who wishes to contribute. The mittens• will go to needy chil dren of• Centre County and' other• parts of -the country. • • ~Eeports will: be made on the CFiildrens World Theater, the book exhibit, the care package, and the ACEI Pennsylvania Conven tion, which was held in State, Col lege. • . 2 Anyone interested, in . securing. membership in the ACEI may do so by bringing , $l.OO to this meet- egg Griatip Initiaiies 4 Alpha Tau Alpha, agricultural education honorary society, has initiated six new members: They are Lester Beck,, Wilmer HarriS, Daryl Heasley, Robert Korona, William E. McLaughlin ; and Wit- . , . By JOE-BEAU-SEIGNEUR Miss Ives, better known around campus, is Betsy, has the role originated by Ethel Barrymore in the drama of Welsh mining life, her second Players show. She, made her campus drainatics debut last semester as Linda Loman, the female lead in Arthur Miller's Pulitzer Prize winning drama, ,"Death of a Salesman." In - "The . Corn Is Green" Miss Ives portrays Miss Moffat, a domi neering, strong woman, whose warmth of personality which comes out .at odd moments is the only thing which saves her from complete destruction. She comes to the Welsh mining town to teach school, and it is there she finds Morgan, a gifted boy whose mind is undeveloped from years in :the mines. • Morgan's idea of a holiday is to walk above ground. In two years Miss Moffat prepared him and gets a scholarship- to Oxford for him. He is half-afraid , of her until he realizes that she has suppressed her affection towards him and really loves him as her own son. Miss Ives, a native of Scranton, appeared with the Scranton Com munity Theater before entering the University, and has also worked for radio station WARM in Scranton doing children's' shows. "The Corn Is Green" opens at 8 p.m. Friday at Center Stage in the Temporary Union Building. Four other performances are set for December 10 and 17 and for January 7 and 14. O'Leary to Open Religious. Talks The first in a series of three religious discusions .will be held at 8 p.m. tonight at Theta Kappa IPhi by the Interfraternity Coun cil of Chaplains, James Parmiter, chief of chaplains, has announced. The . discussion will be intro= duced by the Bev. John J. O'Leary, who will, speak on "Catholicism.' In following weeks, the Coun-' cil• of Chaplains will conduct dis cussions on Judaism and Protes tantism, in an effort to promote interfraternity welfare through a better ,knoWledge •,of personal re ligion 'and place in the frat ernity. • Ponhel 'Meeets Tonight A special meeting of Panhel lenic,Council will be held at 6:30 tonight in the Delta Zeta Suite, 129. Simmons,. Louise Moreznan, council president, has announced: Sorority representatives who have•. not . turned in their rushing. recommendation heetS should bring them to, the. meeting. . THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. ' STATE .COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Portrays Miss Moffat abeth Ives Stars in 'Corn' Scranton Native Air Force ROTC Schedules Flights The Air Force Reserve Offi cer Training Corps, in acquaint ing its cadets with planes and flying, has scheduled a series of flight trips. The trips, which Will be made in • a C-47, will originate from the Fiate. Col lege airport. Each cadet is given an_ op portunity to steer the•plane for approximately, ten minutes: Previously, students were taken to the - Olmstead Air Force Base at Middletown but this system has proved imprac tical. However, some groups of cadets will still be- taken to Olmstead in order to observe first hand the workings 'of a large air base. Trustees Approve $10,320 Allocation For Scholarships The allocation of $10,320.03 to the Alumni Memorial Scholar ships fund has been approved by the Board of Trustees' of the Uni versity. The money was contrib uted. by the 1954 . Alumni. Fund. The Alumni Memorial Scholar ships are awarded to high school seniors selected by a committee at the University on the basis of high scholarship and .outstanding qualities of citizenship and lead ership. District alumni clubs nom inate candidates for the awards. Ray Tannehill, general , chair man• of the Alumni Fund, reported that 7922 alumni have contributed this year to the 1954 Alumni Fund, The fund, which will continue-un til Dec. 31, has received 4135,000 to date. Party to Be Held By Housemothers The Fraternity HousemOther's Club will -hold a Christmas card party at 8 tonight at the Allen crest Tea Room. Dessert will be served and sniall gifts exchanged. 0. Edward Pollock, dean of men, and Mrs. Pollock will be guests. The Housemother's Club was organized last month at Sigma Nu. Mrs. Gertrude Steelman, house mother at Sigma Nu, was elected president. The club will meet the first Wednesday evening of each month at either a fraternity house or a tea room in State College. ' Ruths to Lead UCA Fireside Discussion The Rev. Arthur Ruths, Luth eran campus pastor, will lead the first of a series of fireside dis cussions for the Christmas season at the University Christian As sociation assembly at 7 tonight in 304 Old Main. His topic will be "The Place of Advent in the Church Year." A devotional service will precede the discussion at 6:45 p.m. E{ NOW Maureen MacDoriald O'Hara Carey "FIRE OVER AFRICA" Doors • Open 6 p.m. Alec Guinness • "THE MALTA STORY"! Class Presidents To Be Iristalled Presidents-elect Samuel Wolcott, sophomore _class, and Arthur Schravesende, •freshman class, will be installed at All-University Cabinet tomorrow night. Wolcott will replace Hugh Cline and Schravesande will replace James Musser. on Cabinet. Wolcott was . Lion party's nomi nee fcir sophomore class president, and Schravesancie was State par ty's nominee for freshman class president: Young Demos Elect Fox The Penn State Young Demo crats Club has elected James Fox, president. Other officers elected were: •Thurman Lorick, vice pres ident; Vanessa Johnson, secretary; William Appleton, corresponding secretary; and Susan Street, treas urer. -.44..1...,.. , - `-" , t.::... '' .:g.ft iii.»..,14 . • OIL HOME, SWEET HOMECOMING A great number of people. have been asking me lately, "What is Homecoming?" Yesterday, for example, as I walked from my house to the establishment of Mr. Sigafoos, the local lepidopterist where I had left a half dozen luna moths to be mounted a distance of no more than three blocks I'll wager that well over a thousand people stopped me and said, "What is Homecoming?"' Well, what with company coming for dinner and the cook down with a recurrence of breakbone .fever, I could not tarry to answer their questions. "Read my column next week," I cried to them. "I'll ..tell all about Homecoming." With that I brushed past and raced home to baste the mallard .and apply poultices to the cook, who, despite my unending ministrations, expired quietly during the night, a woman in her prime, scarcely 108 years old. Though her _passing grieved me, -it was some satisfaction to be able to grant her last wish to be buried at sea which is no small task when you live'in Pierre, South Dakota. With the dinner guests fed and the cook laid to her watery rest, I put out the cat and turned to the problem of Homecoming. First of all, let us define Homecoming. Homecoming is a weekend when old graduates return to theiralma maters to see a football game, ingest great quantities of food and drink, and inspect each other's bald spots. ' This occasion is marked, by the singing of old songs, the slapping of old backs, and the frequent utterance of such outcries as "Harry, you old polecat!" or "Harry, you old rooster!" or "Harry, you old wombat!" or "Harry, you old .mandrill!" All old grads are named Hairy : • During Homecoming the members of the faculty behave with unaccustomed animation. They laugh and smile and pound backs and keep shouting, "Harry, you old retriever!" These unscholarly actions are performed in the hope that the old grads, in a transport of bonhomie, will endow a new geology building. The old _grads, however, are seldom seduced. By game time on Saturday, their backs are so sore, their eyes so bleary, and their livers so sluggish that it is impossible to get a kind word out of them, much less a new geology building. "Hmphh!" they snort as the home team completes a 101 yard march to a touchdown. "Call that football? Why, back in my day they'd have been over on the first down. By George, football was football back in those days not this namby pamby girls game that passes for football today. Why, look at that bench. Fifty substitutes sitting there! Why, in _,my day, there were eleven men on a team and that was it. When you broke a leg, you got taped up and went right back in. Why, I remem ber the - big game againgt. State. Harry Wallaby, our star quarter back, was killed in the third quarter. I mean he was pronounced dead. But did that stop old Harry? Not on your tintype! Back in he went and kicked' the winning drop-kick in the last four seconds of play, dead as he was. Back in my day, they played football, by George!" Everything, say the old grads, was better back in their day everything except one: Even the most unreconstructed of the old grads has•to admit that back in his day they never had a smoke like today's vintage Philip Morris never anything so mild and pleasing, day in day out, at study or at play, in sunshine or in shower, on grassy bank or musty taproom, afoot or ahorse, at home or abroad„ any time, any weather, anywhere. I take: up next another important aspect of. Homecoming the decorations in front of the fraternity house. Well do . I remember one Homecoming of my' undergraduate days. The game was against Princeton. The Homecoming slogan was "Hold That Tiger!" Each fraternity house built a decoration to reflect that slogan, and on the morning of the game a group of dignitaries toured Fraternity -Row to inspect the decorations and award a prize for the best. The decoration' chairman at our house was an enterprising young man named Rex Sigafoos, nephew of the famous lepidopterist. Rex surveyed Fraternity Row, came back to our house and said, "All the other houses are building cardboard cages with cardboard tigers inside of them. We need to do something different and I've got it. We're going to have a real cage with a real tiger inside of it—a snarling, clawing, slashing, real live tiger!" "Crikey!".we breathed. 'But where will you get him?" "I'll borrow him from the zoo," said Rex, and sure enough, he did. Well sir, you can imagine what a sensation it was on Home.. coming morning. The judges drove along nodding politely at card board tigers in cardboard cages and suddenly they came to our house. No sham beast in a sham cage here! No sir! A real tiger in a real cage a great striped jungle killer who slashed and roared and snarled and dashed himself against the bars of his cage with mani acal fury. , There can .be no. doubt that we would have easily taken first prize had not the 'tiger knocked out the bars of the cage and leaped into the official car and devoured Mr. August Schlemmer, the governor of the state, Mr. Wilson Ardsley Devereaux, president of the uni versity, Dr. 0. P. Gransmire, author of A Treasury of the World's Great ,Southpasos: An Anthology of Left Hand Literature, Mr. -Harrison J. Teed, commissioner of weights and measures, Mrs. Amy Dorr 'Nesbitt, inventor of the clarinet, Mr. Jarrett Thrum, world's 135 pound lacrosse champion, Mr. Peter Bennett Hough, editor of the literary quarterly Spasm, and Mrs. Ora Wells Anthony, first woman to tunnel under the North Platte River. Oblax Shulman, 1954 This column its brought to wet by the makers of PHILIP 1l7OR•RIS who think you would enjoy their cigarette. Pressloff-Schleifer Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schleifer a Princeton, N.J., announce th marriage of their daughter, Rib to Franklin Pressloff of New Yorl " Mrs. Pressloff is a graduate the University and a member c Sigma Delta Tau. Mr. Pressloff attended Hofstz College and was recently dis charged from the United State Army. Herschenfeld-Goncher Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Goncht of Wilkes-Barre announce th marriage of their daughter Sap dra to Arthur Herschenfeld. Mrs. Herschenfeld attended tb University and is a member a Sigma Delta Tau. Mr. Herschenfeld is a gradual of the University of Pennsylvani and is serving with the Coal Guard. (Author of "Barefoot Boy 'With Cheek" ete:P. PAGE FT Marriages