£E-= I ®h? Satlg % Cult ‘ ) V/ VOL. 37—No. 5 Ninety Pledges Added Yesterday - Ninety more pledges were re ported to Student Union yesterday bringing the total for the six elaps ed days of rushing season to 471. This number includes pledges from all classes. The IFC commit tee at Student Union keeps no rec ord of classes and this prevents the Daily Collegian from reporting a more" detailed list. . Last year, freshman pledges re ported during rushing season total led -359. There were 532 pledges from all classes. : Circumstances prevented the in clusion of Theta Xi and Triangle pledges in yesterday’s list. Their pledges for both yesterday and to day are listed below. In other "cases, only new pledges are listed. The figures in paren thes show the total'"number of pledges reported to Student Union by each fraternity. Yesterday’s pledges: Acacia (7) - Alpha Chi Rho (4) - Alpha Chi Sigma (5): Richard Miller, Charles S. Dawson. Alpha Gamma Rho (6): Edward Roberts, Robert Kauffman, Edson Catlin, Boyd A; Bell. Alpha Kappa Pi (7) Alpha Phi Delta (8) Alpha Sigma Phi (7) Alpha Tau Omega (7) Alpha Zeta (6): E. Clinton Stubbe, James H. Buckey, Ray mond L. Smith. Beaver House (17): John Balega, Joseph Kane, Alton Brown, Fred erick Brooks, James Reefsnyder, Loren Smith, Howard " Kuggel, 'Galen 7 Alexander, . James 'Hepler, Bernard McDonald; John Susser, Joseph Metzger, Albert Carney, John Heckert, Allen Heck, George (Continued on page eight) Wickard To Talk Here Next Week Claude R. Wickard, secretary of the U. S. Department of Agricul ture, will speak in -Schwab Audi torium, next Tuesday, "on “The Place of Agriculture, in the Na tional Defense Program.” Secretary Wickard will arrive in State College Tuesday after noon, and will make an inspec tion tour of the College, paying particular attention to the School of Agriculture. Farmers, members o'f agricul tural organizations, and represen tatives of the several federal agri cultural programs operating in the state are invited to attend'the meeting. Faculty members and students are especially invited. The meeting is slated to begin at 7 p. m. and President Hetzel will introduce the speaker. Exped Enrollment Totals To Smash All Records With accurate figures not yet available, the total enrollment here is expected to go well over the 7,100 mark this year, with freshman enrollment near in g 1,600. Total enrollment figures are expected to be completed tonight, in which case they will appear tomorrow in the Daily Collegian. An indication of the record breaking enrollment this year came yesterday when registration officials nearly ran out of sopho more registration cards. Russian Courses Given Russian *i 3 ahcl 2 may be sched uled 1 by : appointment in Room 6 Liberal Arts at 4 p. m. today.. WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 18, 1940, STATE COLLEGE, PA. Will Dedicate Song Fred Waring, orchestra leader and former Penn State student, said yesterday afternoon he will dedicate his new song to Penn State on his Chesterfield football smoker program Friday, October 11. The program is carried over the NBC red network at 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. and will be heard at the Col legian Dance in R'ec Hall during the late broadcast. While here last May, Waring received a petition from the student body asking him' to write the new song. Customs Lifted From 72 Frosh Customs had been lifted from 72 freshmen when the first Tribunal hieetibg of the-year cldsed'at'll pT m. last night. The reason for most of the. exemptions was that the freshmen were over 21. Approximately 35 were granted temporary exemptions for other reasons. These reasons will be checked on during the week and definite rulings will be handed down at the next meeting of Tri bunal on Tuesday. W. Lewis Corbin, ’4l, chairman of Tribunal, asked for the cooper ation of all upperclassmen and hat societies in regard to enforcing customs. All freshmen breaking regulations should be identified by matriculation cards and their names should be turned in at Stu dent Union. The list of names, in order of approval, follows: Norman W. Meyers, Philip P. Mitzkevich, Walter W. Lindberg, Robert D. Halpin, Harold N. Len ker, Mark R. Pettit, Blake C. And erson, Willard S. "Kintz, John H. Germain, Samuel E. Pretz, Chris tian B. Zimmerman. Thaddeus A. Belefski, Bernard 'A. Koral, Kenneth V. Ridge, Louis J. Carpeneto, Paul M. Budzak, Frank J. Mank, Richard H. Shiff ner, George L. Bittel, Ralph H. Hitchcock, William W. Wance, Lo gan L- Gerheim, Andrew J. Gaber. Cyril J. Bellavance, Richard D. Michel, Remzl Gurcay, Harrison S. Gruber Jr., William Satterth waite, Kenneth W. Masterson, Michael Chruney, Joseph E. Grein er, Warren V. Galiffa, Benjamin B. Raiken. • Morley C. Livingston, Joseph G. McCune, Joseph E. Dolinar, Paul (Continued on page Eight) Froth, Portfolio Start Subscription Campaign First issues of Froth, college hu mor magazine, and Portfolio, stu dent literary publication, are now on sale at Student Union. . Froth sells for 15 cents an issue, while 'a year's subscription, 10 is sues, is priced at one dollar. • Portfolio is 10c a copy, with six issues' for 50 cents. - Subscribers will receive their copies by deliv ery this year. • OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE Overnight Parking Is Thing Of Past Action was taken at a meeting of the State College borough council Monday night to make overnight parking on borough streets a thing of the past. After a lengthy executive ses sion, it was announced that the borough police force will rigidly enforce an ordinance prohibiting “parking between the hours of 2 a.m. and 6 a.m.” on any borough street. The council also ordered that Locust Lane and South Frazier streets will be one-way streets with parking permitted only on one side. South Frazier will carry one-way traffic in a southerly di rection from W. Fairmount to W. Beaver with parking only on the west side. Locust Lane, from E. Foster to E. Hamilton, will be one-way with north to south traffic and parking on the east side only. Signs will designate this regulation which will be in effect seven days a week. It was intimated that some sort of warning would be used before the $lO fine for overnight parking was enforced, though second of fenders will probably receive the full punishment of either $lO fine or five days imprisonment. Russell E. Clark, College bursar and borough council president, emphasized the fact that the en forcement of the ordinance was made necessary largely because of townspeople's disregard. “The ord inance is purely a safety measure,’’ he pointed out. “Overnight-park ing, especially on streets where both sides are used and. on our nar rower streets, represents a con siderable hazard to fire protec tion,” the council president said. Medical Talks Set By Id Local Groups Continuing last year’s program of talks on preventive medicine five lectures have been scheduled for this year, sponsored by 16 Col lege and town groups in conjunc tion with State Department of Health committee headed by Mrs. Edna M. Kech of Altoona, former president of the Women’s Auxil iary of the American Medical As sociation. First of the three talks will be “The Common Cold and Pneu monia,” November 13. A talk on “Tuberculosis” will be given De cember 4 in connection with Christmas seal sales, illustrated with two movies. Dr. Ralph Tyson, noted Philadel phia pediatrician, will speak on “Child Health” in January. Spon soring this meeting are WSGA, Mortar Board, WSGA Junior Serv ice Board, and the Women’s Club of State College. During National Social Hygiene Week in February, Dr. Alfred F. Doyle of the State Department of Health will speak on veneral and “With These Weapons,” a movie, will be shown. The entire group is sponsoring this program. . “Opportunities for Women in Medicine in Allied Fields" will be .the topic of Dr. Margaret H. Sut ley, Philadelphia women’s surgeon, when she speaks to women in March in a program sponsored by lota Sigma Pi. . Cooperating- College groups are the College Health Service, the School of Physical Education, All- College Cabinet, pre-m edi c a 1 group, lota Sigma -Pi, WSGA, WSGA Junior Service Board, and Mortar Board; town groups are County Medical Society, AAUW, PTA, Penn State Alumnae, Amer ican Legion, American. Legion Auxiliary, Xiwanis, and State Col lege Women’s Club,. wjtatt Students May Register Locally For Conscription iiiimimiiiiimiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimtiiiiiiiiiiiii Townspeople Will Vole On Sunday Movie Issue “Do you favor the conducting, staging, operating, and exhibit ing of motion pictures regard less of whether an admission charge is made or incidental thereto or whether labor or business is necessary to conduct, stage, or exhibit the same after two o’clock post meridian, on Sunday?” This question on Sunday movies will be answered by the voters of State College at the general elections on November 5. Eighteen petitions were pre sented to the county commis sioners- by Warner Brothers Theatres in State College after the borough council had certi fied them. iiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniiiiiiii Queen Contest Gains Intensity ' All Collegian solicitors who have subscription book s— whether they have sold sub scriptions or not—must report to the Collegian office, 313 Old Main, between 6:30’ p. m. and ' 7:30 p.'m.'tonight.' ' As groups gathered around pos ters in the town and on campus showing the sponsored candidates for Freshman Queen, interest in the 1940 Collegian Queen contest took on. a new intensity yesterday. Voting has already begun at Student Union desk in Old Main and tabulations showing how the leaders in the competition are faring will be published beginning the latter part of this week. • Complete rules for the contest as announced yesterday by Adam A. Smyser ’4l, Collegian editor, follow: 1— Any Penn State coed is eligible. (Freshman candidates are not restricted to the 12 sponsored by senior men.) 2 Each subscriber will be allow-- ed one vote and may vote for any coed he' or she chooses. 3—The votes will be tabulated un der the supervision of a board of judges. Three queens will be chosen on this basis: A Freshman Queen, the freshman woman receiving the highest number of votes; a Sorority Queen, the sorority woman re ceiving the highest, number of votes; and a Dormitory Queen, the non-sorority upperclass woman receiving the highest number of votes. 4—Subscribers voting will do so at the Student Union Office in Old Main. As identification they must present a Collegian dance ticket. 5 Voting will close at 7 p. m. September 30, 1940. 6 Final selection of a Collegian Queen will be made from the three queens selected in the voting. This selection will be made by a board of judges to be announced before Septem- ber 30. 7—Results of the judging will be kept secret until the night of the Collegian Dance, Friday, October 11, 1940. The Collegian Quen will reign at the dance with the other , two queens as her attendants, —©UY COLLEGIA*! NOW— . District Draff Board May Be In State College College students will not be forced to go home to register for the draft on October 16 as the result of a clause in President Roosevelt’s proclamation which permits anyone to register in the district “in which he happens to be on that date.” The district draft board will probably be located in either State College or Bellefonte, it was learned today. The exact location has not yet been decided, the County Commissioners said. All students from the ages of 21 and 35 inclusive, will be re -quired to register. However, students called may— by request only—defer military service until the end of the aca demic year. Then they must un dergo training for a period of one year. ■ This provision will undoubtedly reduce to a handful the number of students leaving the College to take compulsory military ser vice this year. It is expected that not until next year will the stu dent body—mainly the upper classes—suffer any decrease in enrollment. The part’of the College to feel the brunt of conscription most will be the faculty and administration. At present,--however, no plans have been made to keep the staff at its usual size. Delegates Leave For Penn Tonight Arnold C. Laich ’4l. All-College president, and William B. Bar tholomew, senior class president, will leave tonight to attend the University of Pennsylvania’s bi centennial celebration and''Presi dent Ralph D. Hetzel will probably leave tomorrow. Laich and Bartholomew will represent the College student body and President Hetzel will repre sent the Board of Trustees' and the administration. Featured meeting of the three day celebration will be the 200th anniversary exercises, Friday aft ernoon, at which President Frank lin D. Roosevelt will speak. Other speakers at this time will be Sir Lyman P. Duff, chief justice of Canada; Owen J. Roberts, United States Supreme Court justice; and Thomas S. Gates, president of the University of Pennsylvania. Other important sessions of the celebration will be the first bi centennial meeting, Friday morn ing; a formal dinner and dance at the Philadelphia Country Club, Friday night; convocation, Satur day morning; and the reception of official delegates and confer ring of honoray rdegrees, Satur day. Completion Of Road Resurfacing Nears Amiesite resurfacing of campus roads will 'be finished by the end of this week, if inclement weather does not hold up the work, George "W. Ebert, superintendent of grounds and buildings, said yes terday. - All campus roads are being re finished. The work was originally ;scheduled to be. completed by Sep •tember 10 bub was delayed by bad weather. •ji , - J. . Weather— Fair and Cool PRICE FIVE CENTS