XJAGE FOUR Women in Speak Alt Wednesday Readings Women speakers will be featur ed in a novel leap year program cing planned by faculty women and the wives of faculty members in, the ninth annual series of Wed iicsday Readings in Room 402 of 'the Library to begin November 6 and to continue through December Pa, according to College LibArian Willard P. Lewis. Miss A. Pauline Locklin, assist ant professor of English literature, will initiate the readings on No vember 6 and she will be followed by Mrs. Carroll D. Champlin, Mrs. )i.Obert W. Stone, Mrs. Harriet D. )4esbitt, Miss Matilda A. Bentley, assistant to the dean of women, awl Mrs. Henry S. Brunner. R ! : ::•.• • . • : ... ,• Ai .Evenings. Only 8.30, 8:30 ,k i 1 TODAY ONLY I luxeii - " . "'''';,'/•-• ,,, , , ,,, ... Viefoi ii cz do 4 i ~ joh n Lod e '" e 4 ... •.:: i/„ . : , ' ' =, 4 ^ ,: e , . . , ; . ~,tR. s.' r i (r: MONDAY - TUESDAY I , JACK BENNY, i" 4 : .'. "ROCHESTER" ~.. ANDY DEVINE _i n _ : . " BUCK BENNY i . RIDES AGAIN" R ="-' T 9 , 1: A, T P.F 300 Coeds Take Males To Ewen Dance; Profits Will Go To Scholarship Fund We, The Women— Shall '44 Customs Be Extended ! IN THE near future WSGA will decide when to take freshman customs off. Frosh are usually de ribboned before Thanksgiving but wear name cards for a longer per iod. Last year Senate felt it was necessary to prolong the green season. With meetings being so grudgingly attended, we wonder if we shall have a repeat perform ance of last year's WSGA action, Some enthusiasm can still turn the tide, frosh. Ifll WITH JUNIOR Service Board planning to entertain faculty mem bers in the dining commons and faculty members inviting members of the freshman class to their homes. professor-student relations are hitting a campatibiilty high. WE CAN'T say too much about our abhorrence of egg-yodelers in the dining rooms. Also in our hate league are coeds who can't remem ber to practice the etiquette rule of saying nothing when a dish doesn't appeal to them, and those who must trump up excuses to keep the competent waiters run ning around. =EMI IT IS A wonderful 'day to see the Engineers get .taken over to the tune of 76-0 (as has been pre dicted) but since we can't we shall yield to our temptation and 'put on slacks. Then for those wonderful banisters in the new library! PSCA Elects Officers John T. Maletic '4l was elected treasurer of the PSCA at a meet ing held in the Hugh Beaver room Wednesday night. Other officers elected were Walter N. Shambach '42, member of the board• of direc tors, and Mary Betty Anderson '42, publicity chairman. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111MNI1111111111111111111111111 CAMPUS CALENDAR 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 TODAY: Tea, reception, and fashion show at the Hillel Foundation for all faculty and women students at 2 p. m. Record concert in Room 417, Old Main, 8 p. m. TOMORROW: AZA council meeting at the Hillel Foundation at 2 p. m. All former members invited. Hillel social, Beta Sigma Rho, 8:30 p.m. "Career Party" in Wesley Foun dation gym at 8 p.m. Professor Ray Carpenter will speak at PSCA Cabin in Shingle town Gap this afternoon. Press League of Bucks and Mont gomery counties will meet at the Nittany Lion at 2 p.m. CLASSIFIED SECTION HAVE YOUR TYPING problem solved expertly and economic ally—subject to your approval. Es timates cheerfully given. Dial 4005. 3tpdl7-21-231VILE FOR RENT--Sthgle room for stu dent. Tub and shower bath $3.00 a week. Phone 627. 808 West Col lege. 3tpdlo22E FOR RENT—Single room. Inquire 105 East Nittany avenue, phone 2129. 3tcomplo22E WANTED—Ride to or near Fal- mouth, Mass. OetOber 24th or 25th. Call "Btinchie" 11 Atherton Hall. WANTED 'A'dverfiing s p Ere e salesmen. College students only for established College publica tions. Must be dependable and able to prepare own layouts. Write at once stating particulars. Address Box BB The Daily Collegian. P.O. Box 261, Town, stpdlo2sE THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Three hundred couples ,danced in White Hall from 9 to 12 p. m. last night as coeds escorted dates to the first formal of the year. Proceeds will go for scholarships to be awarded to sophomore wom en at the annual WSGA Christmas dinner in Mac Hall. A medieval-decorated gymna sium created. the' atmosphere in which the men and their escorts danced to the music of Rex Rock well and his band. The portrait of an Anglo-Saxon noblewoman by Jean C; Craighead '4l, who will soon start water col or murals in White Hall, sur rounded by lighted tapers high lighted the decorations while a casement window effect an pap er masks and foils on the walls carried out the fifteenth century theme. The Cwen crown and sceptre was set off by hemlock boughs which surrounded the orchestra platform which was draped in green. Chaperones were: Miss Char lotte E. Ray, dean of women; Miss Elizabeth C. Bell, Miss Matilda A. Bentley, Miss Mary Jane Steven son, assistants to the dean of wom en; Miss Marie Haidt, head of women's physical education de partment; Mrs. F. W. Haller; and Miss Ruth H. Zang, Mrs. Neva M. Morris, Mrs. H. M. Pope, Mrs. Anne B. Searle, Miss C. Jeanette Oswald, and Mrs; Grace L. Hall, dormitory hostesses. 'Sister' Tea Tomorrei "Little Sisters" will entertain their "Big Sisters" at a tea in Woman's Building from 3 to 5 p. m. tomorrow. - Head of the tea planned by WSGA Freshman Council is H. Ann Carruthers, freshman senator, letters (Continued from page two) and freedom of speech, both in themselves priceless fruits of the democracy we are fighting to pre- serve. It is indeed the question of free dom of education a question which strikes at the very heart of democracy itself. Tear out the heart of democracy and what remains is but a lifeless body like the one called France. After all, if we are fighting for democracy,. why begin scuttling it before the bell rings? Why sub stitute the "party line" of totali tarianism for the system of an in terchange of ideas which for more than 150 years we have rightfully paraded before the world as de mocracy's greatest selling point? True, there is danger to national unity in letting every man have his say. But the danger of that is as nothing compared to the danger of censorship of education and cen sorship of conscience. The Communists today would present a dangerous menace to the safety of America—far more dan gerous than they really are—had it not been for the traditional pol icy of this country to let them-have their say. If we had not listened to their arguments we never would have known what they thought of Germany before the Nazi-Soviet pact. And we never would have seen the Red in their faces—as we did when they were caught with their pants down in August, 1939._ Let us remember, in these troublous times, that while de mocracy entails respect for rule by the majority, it also entails respect for the opinion of minor ities. Let us remember that while a man may be divorced from his job 'through force; he cannot be divorced, from his convictions ex cept through argument and per suasion. And let us remember, above all else, that half-democracy is no democracy at all.. As a Colonial sage once said: Let us be hard-hearted patriots, sir—but not spineless chauvinists. John A. Troanovitch '39 111111111111111111111111111111111111:11111111111111111111111111111111111 '42 Women To Exhibit Food Display Tuesday Two phosphorus food displays prepared by junior coeds in the nutrition labratory will begin Tuesday in Room 209 Home Ec onomics building from 8 a. in. until 12 noon to instruct stu dents and townspeople in diet regulation. One of the exhibits will com pare the phosphorus content of a glass of milk,to other foods. The other will display differ ent foods containing one-tenth of the daily dietary standard. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 War Increases Grady Colors Sport clothes in gay, dashing colors are the rage this fall and all because they were featured in leading fashion magazines this year. Automobiles have influenced the recent tendency toward skirts and sweaters since people spend more time out of doors. And for men, this outdoor life has fostered the popular , combination slacks and coats. Gay, gaudy colors and trim mings are being used to counter- - act the depressed feeling brought about by the war, and pastel shades are dominating outmoded dark colors for dark days. Slop-. piness can be accomplished grace fully through wearing the cur rently featured untrimmed sports coats rather than traditional dressy ones. Even sheer velvet evening wraps are being replaced by cloth coats for warmth and comfort. and double duty evening jacket dresses are sought by the well-dressed co ed, MONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY • B'WAY'S SINGING, DANCING, ROMANCE NIT 1, S s, View . / z- 4 The co-eds tier' a lt o the Screen ! - 4 wear these V114rX.,... VI 'beanie' hats ....." V to show that . ' they've never. FRAN toES SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1940 Cooking Worries Chased by HE 433 If the coffee's bitter, if the spin ach is stringy and i t i mappetizing, seniors in home economics 433 can show any chef how to improve his culinary art. - Demonstrations are conducted four times a week in small classes,. with three women showing how to get the best from a carrot or tomato and the class acting as a querying high school group or a critical women's club. Commercial - food products and electrical appliances were first ex hibited in 20-m-inute speeches. Food demonstrations lasted 40 Minutes. The final test- will con sist of a public demonstration by each 'class member. Taking into consideration that their audiences won't even know how to poach an egg, the demon strators meticulously explain each step in the preparation of the food, under the direction of Miss Edith V. 'Harding. 67/ Chocolate, Sugar Coated, Raised,- Plain, White and Toasted Coconut, Peanut Coated it & W. DOWN • SHOP "Watch Them Being Made" 117 S. PUGH ST. ' Shows at 1:30, 3:00, 6:30, 8:30 TODAY ONLY I