WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 24.1956 'Ruddigore' Ghosts Will Haunt Schwab ’ Ghosts in all their glory will haunt Schwab Auditorium when the Gilbert .md Sullivan comic-opera “Ruddigore” opens iits three-day run at 8 p.m. tomorrow. “Ruddigore” is i joint production of Players and the departments of art, music and theatre arts under the direc tion of Walter Wallers, head of the department of theatre arts. First; produced in 18 don, the opera caused cause, of its original ti Core" which was “bloody sounding” for tive “nice people” of e the aud •hanged to “Witches’ ;s later the I became a hit show. 'Best' Music. Lyrics tury England. To plea* ience, the title was < “Ruddigore” or the Curse” and thirty yeai opera was revived anc fanciful and amusing The eighth full-ler written by the master turvydom, “Ruddigon sidered by many aut containing the best of and Sullivan music Songs range from fi numbers and serious love songs, to the sp >oky howls o'f the ghosts. A burlesque -of the old-fash ioned form of En§ lish melo drama, the opera pokes fun at the British barons, their ancestral duties and their wicked tradi tions. The opera takes place in a Cor nish village where the local bar on, Sir Roderic Murgatroyd, is suffering under a curse of a witch who was burned to death by one of his ancestors. The curse which was prophesied by the witch said that each lord of Ruddigore must commit a crime a day or die a •torturous death. Tries lo Escape Curse Determined to escape his in herited curse, the timid baron sets out to avoid his foretold fate. His methods and the people who become involved with him, in cluding his “ghostly ancestors,” create many funny situations. Included in the cast are Theo dore Pauloski as Richard Daunt less, Barbara Kabakjian as Han nah, Carole Young as Rose May bud, Floyd Santoro as Despaid Murgatroyd, Wayne Zarr as Rob in Murgatroyd, Paul Balshaw as Adam the servant, Mary Jane West as Margaret, Sandra Mayes as Ruth, Evelyn Jacobs as Zor3h, and William Vernon as Sir Rod eric Murgatroyd. Tickets are on sale at the Hetzel Union desk. The price is GO cents for tomorrow’s performance and $1 for Friday and Saturday. By PAT HUNTER t 7 in Lon a stir be le “Ruddy Penn Outing Set For Saturday Tiuch too the sensi 19th cen- The Outing Club will hold an overnight exchange outing with the University of Pennsylvania Saturday at the Forestry Cabin. Students will leave at s:3(Tp.m. Saturday from the rear of Old Main. gth opera s of topsy is coh horities as the Gilbert and lyrics. The weekend program consists of a Halloween party, hikes, square dancing, campfire, and Sunday church service. The cost of the outing is about $1.75, including the use of Uni versity sleeping bags. Sign-up sheets are situated at the Hetzel Union desk. Member ship in the Outing Club is not re quired. inny Navy sentimental FTA to Meet Tomorrow The Future Teachers of Amer ica will at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 405 Old Main. Dues will be col lected and refreshments served jiNj^ymtußST “Bugs! I collect them—whole or otherwise. Drive your car windshield into my station so I can add your bugs to my collection! [w We Give S&H Green Stamps THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Employment Interviews The following firms will con duct interviews for February graduates and advance degree candidates who expect to receive degrees during the current school year in the Placement Service office in 112 Old Main: Nov. 2: BiMinie: All tioereei: lE. Met. ArcbE. Nov. 6: United Aircraft Corp: BS. MS Phya; Women: Chem, Phys. Nov. 7: ACF Industries: All degrees; ChE. Met. IK. Math. Chem. Fhy*. Nov. 7: Battelle Memorial Institute: BS: AeroE. ArehE. CE. EE. lE. ME. Phya, Chem. Nov. 7: Fairchild Aircraft: BS: AeroE, EE. Nov. 7: General Electric: PhD; Com- Chem. Phyi». ChE. Met. Cer, EE. Nov. 7,8: Scott Paper: BS: ME. EE, CE. lE. ChE. Chem, BuaAdm. LA (Sales), Acct*. T&T. Young Dems Hold Membership Drive The Young Democratic Club is conducting a membership drive this week which will be culmin ated at tomorrow night's meeting. Posters have been distributed on campus to arouse interest in the club. Club members are try ing to notify interested students. Donald Smaltz, club president, stressed that members do not have to be 21. Any students interested m the ideals and principles of the Democratic -Party may join, he said. GOING MY JVAY? Join the happy throng at HILTON STATLER HOTELS Special Student Rates Enjoy Big Name Bands NEW YORK CITY. The Slatler The IValdorf-Astoria The Plaza - FOR RESERVATIONS write the Student Relations Repre sentative at the hotel of your choice or call any Hilton-Statler Hotel for immediate confirmation of out-of- WASHINGTON, D. C.t The Slatler BUFFAIO: The Slatler BOSTON: The Staller HARTFORD: The Slaller Art From Hyslop Collection Will Be Displayed at Library Selected works from the collection of Francis E. Hyslop, Jr., associate professor of the history of art and architecture, compose an exhibition in the Pattee Library foyer. The exhibition, which includes original prints, drawings, and paintings from the 16th century to today, will be on display until Nov. 20. ~ Pablo Piscasso is' represented with an etching. “The Frugal Re post,” while Albrecht Altdorfer, who lived in the 16th century, is represented with a woodcut, “La mentation.” Woodcuts Displayed Hobson Pittman, who teaches oil painting during the summer sessions at the University, is rep resented with a woodcut, “Awak ening Maltese” and with a pastel. "Porch Scene.” There also is a woodcut by the late Dr. Warren B. Mack, former head of the de partment of horticulture at the University, and an abstraction by George Faddis, a 1947 graduate of the University. Engravings of William Hogarth included in the exhibition are “The Idle Prentice” and “The Miss Kay Vyse T ■RUTHFULLY we enjoy photography tremendously. SOME of the things we do accidentally and intentionally causes this enjoyment. Sometimes it gives us a~ pile of trouble. Such as, for example, doing all our sorority com posites in white blouses last year. •jpHIS year, merely on ahunch; we decided to use vignettes * with high key lighting. If you're interested we suggest that you ask the Alpha Xi Deltas and the Kappa Deltas, who just received their proofs, for their comments concerning this lighting. If the tone of their comments parallels the quan tity of orders for portraits from these proofs, then we know that this new lighting technique is a happy accident for us. ■ IUMAN nature is a strange thing. Much as we tell people ■■ that our quality is considerably lower in later November and December because of the Christmas rush, we find that most people still prefer to watt until just then to have a Christmas portrait taken. It might even be fair to lower our prices around that time to be commensurate with our quality. pERHAPS for some of you, a fine portrait may be rather ■ expensive at this time. If that be the case, pay only part of your bill now and the remainder-after Christmas. But do get a portrait to your folks by Christmas. *we won’t be doing fraternity composite* until next year. Rake’s Progress” while the French artists, Henri de Toulouse- Lautrec and Honore Daumier are represented with lithographs. Cassett Represented Mary Cassatt, the Pennsylvania painter, is represented with a drypoint print. “Simone in a Large Bonnet;” Henri Matisse with a rug; and Auguste Renior'* soft ground etching of “Claude Renior” is included. Prints of local interest include “Rail Fence.” a drawing by art H. Frost, instructor in art. and “Vrai Guignolet,” a drawing by Sybil D. Emerson, professor of art education. El Circulo Espanol to Meet El Circulo Espanol. the Spanish |Club, will meet at 7:30 p.m. to morrow in Grange playroom. bill coleman't PAGE FIVE Kappa Delta bill end bunny